Utilitarianism is the ethical doctrine that the moral
worth of an action is solely determined by its contribution to overall utility. It is thus a
form of consequentialism, meaning that the moral worth of an action is determined by its outcome—the ends justify the means. Utility — the good to be maximized —
has been defined by various thinkers as happiness or pleasure (versus suffering or pain), though preference utilitarians like Peter Singer define
it as the satisfaction of preferences.
History
The origins of Utilitarianism are often traced back as far as the Greek philosopher Epicurus, but as a specific school of thought, it is generally credited to Jeremy Bentham.[1] Bentham found
pain and pleasure to be the only intrinsic values in the world: "nature has placed mankind under the governance of two sovereign
masters, pain and pleasure." From this he derived the rule of utility, that the good is whatever brings the greatest happiness to
the greatest number of people. Later, after realizing that the formulation recognized two different and potentially conflicting
principles, he dropped the second part and talked simply about "the greatest happiness principle."
Jeremy Bentham's foremost proponent was James
Mill, a significant philosopher in his day and the father of John Stuart Mill.
The younger Mill was educated according to Bentham's principles, including transcribing and summarising much of his father's work
whilst still in his teens."[2]
In his famous short work, Utilitarianism, John Stuart Mill argued that cultural, intellectual, and spiritual pleasures are of greater value than
mere physical pleasure, because the former would be valued more highly by competent judges than the latter. A competent judge,
according to Mill, is anyone who has experienced both the lower pleasures and the higher. Like Bentham's formulation, Mill's
utilitarianism is hedonistic, because it deals with pleasure or happiness.
The classic utilitarianism of Bentham and Mill influenced many other philosophers and the development of the broader concept
of consequentialism. As a result, there now exist many different accounts of the good,
and therefore many different types of consequentialism besides utilitarianism. For example, some philosophers reject the sole
importance of well-being and argue that there are intrinsic values other than happiness or pleasure, e.g. knowledge and
autonomy.
Other past advocates of utilitarianism include William Godwin and Henry Sidgwick; modern-day advocates include R. M. Hare,
Peter Singer and Torbjörn Tännsjö.
Utilitarianism has been used as an argument for many different political views. In his essay On Liberty and other works, John Stuart Mill argued that utilitarianism requires that political
arrangements satisfy the "liberty principle" (or harm principle), according to which "the
only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to
prevent harm to others."[3] Prevention of
self-harm by other persons was considered expressly forbidden, although Mill states that potential self-harm is a reason for
other persons to try to persuade a person not to do so.
Ludwig von Mises advocated libertarianism
using utilitarian arguments. Likewise, some Marxist philosophers have also used these principles
as arguments for political socialism.
Origin of the term
Mill claims that he "did not invent the word, but found it in one of Galt's
novels, the 'Annals of the Parish,' in which the Scottish clergyman, of whom the book is a supposed autobiography, is represented as warning his parishioners not to leave the Gospel and
become utilitarians. With a boy's fondness for a name and a banner I seized upon the word..."[4] Mill subsequently named his society of like minded thinkers the "Utilitarian
Society", which met for three and a half years.
Types
Act vs. rule
-
Act utilitarianism states that, when faced with a choice, we must first consider the likely consequences of potential actions,
and from that, choose to do what we believe will generate the most happiness. A rule utilitarian, on the other hand, begins by
looking at potential rules of action. To determine whether a rule should be followed, he looks at what would happen if it were
constantly followed. If adherence to the rule produces more happiness than otherwise, it is a rule that morally must be followed
at all times. The distinction between act and rule utilitarianism is therefore based on a difference about the proper object of
consequentialist calculation: specific to a case or generalized to rules.
Rule utilitarianism has been criticized for advocating general rules that will in some specific circumstances clearly decrease
happiness if followed. To never kill a human might seem to be a good rule, but this could make defense against aggressors very
difficult. Rule utilitarians would then add that there are general exception rules that allow the breaking of other rules if this
increases happiness, one example being self-defense. Critics would then argue that this reduces rule utilitarianism to act
utilitarianism, and the rules become meaningless. Rule utilitarians respond that the rules in the legal system (i.e. laws) which
regulate such situations are not meaningless. For instance, self-defense is legally justified while murder is not.
Rule utilitarianism should not be confused with heuristics (rules of thumb). Many act utilitarians agree that it makes sense
to formulate certain rules of thumb to follow if they find themselves in a situation in which the consequences are difficult,
costly, or time-consuming to calculate exactly. If the consequences can be calculated relatively clearly and without much doubt,
then the rules of thumb can be ignored.
Motive
This approach is an interesting hybrid between act and rule utilitarianism first developed by Robert Adams ("Motive Utilitarianism," Journal of Philosophy, 1976) which attempts to deal
realistically with how human beings function psychologically. We are indeed passionate, emotional beings, we do much better with
positive goals rather than negative prohibitions, and so on and so forth. Motive utilitarianism proposes that our initial moral
task be to inculcate motives within ourselves that will be generally useful across the spectrum of the situations we are likely
to encounter. For example, similar to the 80-20 rule in business, we might be able to
most improve the future package of experiences if we do a large number of activities in honest partnerships with others, rather
than doing a few things sneakily ourselves?
Two-level
-
Two-level utilitarianism states that one should normally use 'intuitive' moral thinking, in the form of rule utilitarianism,
because it usually maximises happiness. However there are some times when we must ascend to a higher 'critical' level of
reflection in order to decide what to do, and must think as an act utilitarian would. Richard
Hare supported this theory with his concept of the Archangel, which holds that if we were all 'archangels' we could be act
utilitarians all the time as we would be able to perfectly predict consequences. However we are closer to 'proles' in that we are
frequently biased and unable to foresee all possible consequence of our actions, and thus we require moral guidelines. When these
principles clash we must attempt to think like an archangel in order to choose the right course of action.
Negative
- See also: Abolitionism
(bioethics)
Most utilitarian theories deal with producing the greatest amount of good for the greatest number. Negative
utilitarianism (NU) requires us to promote the least amount of evil or harm, or to prevent the greatest amount of
suffering for the greatest number. Proponents argue that this is a more effective ethical
formula, since, they contend, the greatest harms are more consequential than the greatest goods. The founder of NU referred to an
epistemological argument: “It adds to clarity in the fields of ethics, if we formulate our demands negatively, i.e. if we
demand the elimination of suffering rather than the promotion of happiness.” (Karl R.Popper, The Open Society and its
Enemies, London 1945). In the practical implementation of this idea the following versions can be distinguished:
1. Some advocates of the utilitarian principle were quick to suggest that the ultimate aim of NU would be to engender the
quickest and least painful method of killing the entirety of humanity, as this ultimately would effectively minimize suffering.
NU would seem to call for the destruction of the world even if only to avoid the pain of a pinprick [2].
2. Newer, moderate versions of NU do not attempt to minimize all kinds of suffering but only those kinds that are created by
the frustration of preferences. In most supporters of moderate NU the preference to survive is stronger than the wish to be freed
from suffering, so that they refuse the idea of a quick and painless destruction of life. Some of them believe that by time the
worst cases of suffering will be defeated and a world of minor suffering can be realized. The principal agents of this direction
can be found in the environment of transhumanism [3].
Supporters of moderate NU who do not believe in the promises of transhumanism would
prefer a reduction of the population (and in the extreme case an empty world). This seems to come down to the position of radical
NU, but in moderate NU the world could only be sacrificed to prevent extreme suffering and not to avoid the pain of a pinprick.
And from the preference for an empty world does not follow a corresponding political claim. Such a claim would definitely
(and in analogy to radical NU) be counterproductive. Pessimistic supporters of moderate NU therefore tend towards a retreat
oriented way of living.
3. Finally there are theoreticians who see NU as a branch within classical utilitarianism, demanding for a higher priority in
the fight against suffering. [4]. This interpretation though cannot be counted as an independent version of NU,
because it does not avoid Derek Parfit's “Repugnant
Conclusion” [5]. NU is precisely characterized by overcoming this theoretical weakness of classical utilitarianism.
Average vs. total
Total Utilitarianism is the action of measuring the utility of a population
based on the total utility of its members. It falls victim to the Mere addition
paradox. Whereby large numbers of people with very low but non-negative utility values can be seen as a better goal than a
population of a less extreme size living in comfort. This leads to Parfit's Repugnant
Conclusion.
Average Utilitarianism is the action of measuring the utility of a population
based on the average utility of that population. It avoids the Repugnant
Conclusion. However, following the average principle could conceivably lead to a very small population of high utility.
As, Nozick's Utility monster only has to be slightly better at utilizing resources to be
given preference over others. The highest average utility would then be a population consisting only of the monster itself.
Other species
- Further information: Speciesism, animal
welfare
Peter Singer, along with animal rights
activists, has argued that the well-being of all sentient beings (conscious beings who feel
pain, including animals) deserve equal consideration with that given to human beings. Bentham made a similar argument. Even those
utilitarians arguing otherwise note that suffering in animals often causes humans to suffer, thus making it often immoral to harm
an animal even if the animal itself is not given a moral status.
Combinations with other ethical schools
In order to overcome perceived shortcomings of both systems, several attempts have been made to combine utilitarianism with
Kant's categorical imperative. For
instance, James Cornman proposes that in any given situation we should treat as "means" as few
people as possible, and treat as "ends" as many people as are thus then consistent with those "means". He refers to this as the
"Utilitarian Kantian Principle".
Other consequentialists may consider happiness an important consequence, but in addition argue that consequences such as
justice or equality should also be valued, regardless
if they increase happiness or not.
Biological explanation
It has been suggested that sociobiology, the study of the evolution of human society,
provides support for the utilitarian point of view. For example, in The Expanding Circle: Ethics and Sociobiology, the
utilitarian philosopher Peter Singer argues that fundamentally utilitarian ethical
reasoning has existed from the time primitive foraging bands had to cooperate, compromise, and make group decisions to survive.
He elaborates: "In a dispute between members of a cohesive group of reasoning beings, the demand for a reason is a demand for a
justification that can be accepted by the group as a whole." Thus, consideration of others' interests has long been a necessary
part of the human experience. Singer believes that reason now compels the equal consideration of all people's interests:
| “ |
"If I have seen that from an ethical point of view I am just one person among the many
in my society, and my interests are no more important, from the point of view of the whole, than the similar interests of others
within my society, I am ready to see that, from a still larger point of view, my society is just one among other societies, and
the interests of members of my society are no more important, from that larger perspective, than the similar interests of members
of other societies… Taking the impartial element in ethical reasoning to its logical conclusion means, first, accepting that we
ought to have equal concern for all human beings." |
” |
This conclusion — that everybody's interests should be considered equally when making decisions — is a core tenet of
utilitarianism.
Singer elaborates that viewing oneself as equal to others in one's society and at the same time viewing one's society as
fundamentally superior to other societies may cause an uncomfortable cognitive
dissonance. This is the sense in which he means that reason may push people to accept a broader utilitarian stance.
Critics (e.g. Binmore 2005) point out that this cognitive dissonance is apparently not very strong, since people often knowingly
ignore the interests of faraway societies quite similar to their own. They also note that the "ought" of the quoted paragraph
applies only to someone who has already accepted the premise that all societies are equally important. Singer has responded that
his argument in Expanding the Circle wasn't intended to provide a complete philosophical justification for a utilitarian
categorical imperative, but merely to provide a plausible explanation for how
some people come to accept utilitarianism.
Bertrand Russell, in his History of
Western Philosophy, makes this statement: "Darwinism was an application to the whole of animal and vegetable life... which
was an integral part of the politics and economics of the Benthamites - a global free competition, in which victory went to the
animals that most resembled successful capitalists."
Criticism and defense
"Common sense" morality
Utilitarianism has been criticized for leading to a number of conclusions contrary to "common sense" morality. For example, it
might be argued that it is "common sense" that one should never sacrifice some humans for the happiness of other humans.
Utilitarians, however, argue that "common sense" has been used to justify many positions on both sides of controversial issues
and varies greatly from individual to individual, making it an unsuitable basis for a "common" morality. Regarding the example,
it is equally "common sense" that one must sacrifice some soldiers and civilians in a defensive war.
Comparing happiness
Another difficulty with utilitarianism is that of comparing happiness among different people. Many of the early utilitarians
hoped that happiness could somehow be measured quantitatively and compared between people through felicific calculus, otherwise known as the hedonic
calculus, although no one has ever managed to construct a detailed one in practice. It has been argued that the happiness
of different people is incommensurable, and thus felicific
calculus is impossible, not only in practice, but even in principle. Defenders of utilitarianism reply that this problem is faced
by anyone who has to choose between two alternative states of affairs where both impose burdens to the people involved. If
happiness were incommensurable, the death of a hundred people would be no worse than the death of one. Triage is an example of a real world situation where utilitarianism seems to be applied successfully.
That the pleasure of a sadist should have the same importance as the pleasure of an
altruist has also been criticized. Supporters note that in practice almost no decisions will be
made to cater to the sadist. While creating pleasure for an altruist simultaneously helps other people, creating pleasure for a
sadist simultaneously hurts other people. Furthermore, many utilitarians feel that sadist pleasure is superficial and temporary,
and thus it is detrimental to the sadist in the long run. In practice, therefore, the pleasure of a sadist almost never has a
weight of any significance in a utilitarian calculation. By principles, Mill argued that as a sadist does not take into account
the value of another's happiness (utility) his in this context should not be considered.
Predicting consequences
Daniel Dennett uses the example of Three
Mile Island as another example of the difficulty in calculating happiness.[5] Was the near-meltdown that occurred at this nuclear power plant a good or a bad thing (according to
utilitarianism)? He points out that its long-term effects on nuclear policy would be considered beneficial by many and might
outweigh the negative consequences. His conclusion is that it is still too early (20 years after the event) for
utilitarianism to weigh all the evidence and reach a definite conclusion. Utilitarians note that utilitarianism seems to be the
unspoken principle used by both advocates and critics of nuclear power.[citation needed] That something cannot be determined at the moment is common in science and
is frequently resolved with further advancements.
Utilitarians, however, are not required to have perfect knowledge; indeed, certain knowledge of consequences is impossible
because consequences are in the unexperienced future [citation needed]. Utilitarians simply try their best to maximize happiness (or another form
of utility), and to do this, make their best estimates of the consequences. If the consequences of a decision are particularly
unclear, it might make sense to follow an ethical rule which has promoted the most utility in the past. Utilitarians will also
note that people trying to further their own interests run into situations in which the consequences of their decisions are very
unclear. This does not mean that they are unable to make a decision.
Anthony Kenny argues against utilitarianism on the grounds that determinism is either true or false. If it is true, then we have no choice over our actions. But if it is
false then the consequences of our actions are unpredictable, not least because they will depend on the actions of others whom we
cannot predict.[6]
Importance of intentions
Utilitarianism has been criticized for only looking at the results of actions, not at the desires or intentions which motivate
them, which many people also consider important. An action intended to cause harm but that inadvertently causes good results
would be judged equal to the result from an action done with good intentions. However, many utilitarians would argue that
utilitarianism applies not only to results, but also to desires and dispositions, praise and blame, rules, institutions, and
punishment. For instance, bad intentions may cause harm (to the actor and to others) even if they do not result in bad acts. Once
this is recognized, supporters argue that utilitarianism becomes a much more complex, and rich, moral theory, and may align much
more closely with our moral intuitions.
Furthermore, many utilitarians view morality as a personal guide rather as a means to judge the actions of other people or
actions which have already been performed. In other words, morality is something to be looked at when deciding what to do. In
this sense, intentions are the only thing that matter, because the consequences cannot be known with certainty until the decision
has already been made.
One philosopher to take this view was Henry Sidgwick in his main work The Methods of
Ethics, 1874.
Human rights
Utilitarians may argue that justification of slavery, torture or mass murder would require unrealistically large benefits to
outweigh the direct and extreme suffering to the victims. Utilitarianism would also require the indirect impact of social
acceptance of inhumane policies to be taken into consideration; for example, general anxiety and fear might increase for all if
human rights are commonly ignored. This was an early objection to utilitarianism, and in On Liberty John Stuart Mill
argued that a citizen obeying the concept of utilitarianism could not possibly wish ill on another individual for his own
personal pleasure--while in the aggregate, cruelty could create a 'net' happiness, the individual's sadism is reprehensible under
the utilitarian ethos.
Act and rule utilitarianisms differ in how they treat human rights themselves. Under rule utilitarianism, a human right can
easily be considered a moral rule. Act utilitarians, on the other hand, do not accept human rights as moral principles in and of
themselves, but that does not mean they are rejected altogether. First, most act utilitarians, as explained above, would agree
that acts such as enslavement and genocide always cause great unhappiness and little
happiness. Second, human rights could be considered rules of thumb; although torture might be acceptable under some
circumstances, as a rule it is immoral. Finally, act utilitarians often support human rights in a legal
sense, because utilitarians support laws that cause more good than harm.
Individual interests vs. a greater sum of lesser interests
Since utilitarians judge all actions by their ability to maximize good consequences, any harm to one individual can often be
justified by a greater gain to other individuals. This is true even if the loss for the one individual is large and the gain for
the others is marginal, as long as enough individuals receive the small benefit. Thus, utilitarians deny that individuals have
inviolable moral rights. As explained above, utilitarians may support legal rights or rights as rules of thumb, but they are not
considered inherent to morality. This seems problematic to many critics of utilitarianism, one of whom notes that according to
utilitarianism there is "nothing intrinsically wrong with sacrificing an important individual interest to a greater sum of lesser
interests. That assumption is retained in the foundations of the theory, and it remains a source of moral concern."[7]
Although the above criticism may not be, two other related criticisms of utilitarianism are based on misconceptions. The
principle of "the greatest good for the greatest number", introduced by Bentham, is often mistaken as meaning that if something
hurts one person and helps many, it is always morally justified. This is not the case, however; as noted above, Bentham dropped
the misleading "greatest number" part of the principle, replacing the original formulation with the more direct "greatest
happiness principle." Thus, the morality of an action is not determined by the number of people made happier, but rather the
quantity of happiness produced. A great loss to one individual might be outweighed by small gains for many, but it might
not. Even if 1 person is hurt and 100 people are helped, the harm to the one might be so great as to outweigh the small gains for
the rest of the people.
Second, some criticize utilitarianism for implying that individuals' interests can be sacrificed for the sake of the "society"
or the nation. Modern utilitarianism however proposes that one individual's interests can only be sacrificed for the sake of the
interests of other individuals. As Bentham put it, "The interest of the community is one of the most general expressions that can
occur in the phraseology of morals: no wonder that the meaning of it is often lost. When it has a meaning, it is this. The
community is a fictitious body, composed of the individual persons who are considered as constituting as it were its members. The
interest of the community then is...the sum of the interests of the several members who compose it." [6] While it may benefit
individuals to have a healthy society or a functional state, neither of these are ends in themselves.
Right and wrong dichotomy
A further criticism is in regard to Utilitarianism's judgement of right and wrong. Utilitarianism holds that in any given
situation the 'right' act is that which produced the greatest good, while all other acts are wrong. Therefore even charitable
actions could be considered wrong under this theory. For example, if someone donated £1,000 to a charity that provided starving
children with food when that person could have donated the money to a charity that does the same thing but is more efficient, and
in doing so created even more good, that action would be judged as wrong by Utilitarianism.
In response to criticism of this nature the contemporary philosopher and utilitarian William Shaw claimed that, although Utilitarianism would clearly dictate the above
conclusion, a good utilitarian would still praise the wrongdoer for their charitable donation even though it is wrong. This is
because punishing such a person would likely push them to no longer make any charitable contributions, so praising the wrongdoer
would better serve the greater good than punishing them.
Furthermore, the decision to donate to charity was still morally good, even if the decision to ignore efficiency was immoral.
And since utilitarianism presumes imperfect knowledge, any immoral behavior relative to the charity's inefficiency would be
limited by the difficulty in determining the charities' relative effectiveness.
Proof
Another criticism of utilitarianism is that it is not proven by science or logic to be the correct ethical system.
However, supporters claim that this is common to all ethical schools (and indeed the system of logic itself) and will always
remain so unless the problem of the regress argument or at least the is-ought problem is satisfactorily solved. Indeed, utilitarians are some of the first to recognize this
problem. It might instead be argued that almost all political arguments about a future society use an unspoken utilitarian
principle, all sides claiming that their proposed solution is the one that increases human happiness most. Some degree of
utilitarianism might very well be genetically hard-coded into humans.
Mill's argument for utilitarian is as follows: Pleasure is the only thing desired; therefore pleasure is the only thing
desirable. Critics argue that this is like saying that things visible are things seen, or that the only things audible are things
heard. A thing is 'visible' if it can be seen, and 'desirable' if it ought to be desired. Thus 'desirable' is a word presupposing
an ethical theory - we cannot infer what is desirable from what is desired.
Case for morality
Critics have also asked why one should follow utilitarianism instead of egoism. A
legal system might punish behavior which harms others, but this incentive is
not active in a situation where one can personally gain by breaking it and others cannot punish this. However, one egoist may
propose means to maximize self-interest that conflicts with the means proposed by another egoist. As a result, they are behooved
to compromise with one another to avoid conflict, out of self-interest. The means proposed may incidentally coincide with
those prescribed by utilitarianism, though the foundational ethical imperative would not, of course, be utilitarian.
Another reason for an egoist to become a utilitarian was proposed by Peter
Singer in Practical Ethics. He presents the paradox of hedonism, which
says that if your only goal in life is personal happiness, you will never be happy; you need something to be happy about. One
goal which Singer feels is likely to bring personal happiness is the desire to improve the lives of others. This argument is
similar to the one for virtue ethics.
Karl Marx's arguments
Karl Marx, in Capital, writes:
| “ |
Not even excepting our philosopher, Christian Wolff, in no time and in no country has the most homespun commonplace ever
strutted about in so self-satisfied a way. The principle of utility was no discovery of Bentham. He simply reproduced in his dull
way what Helvétius and other Frenchmen had said with esprit in the 18th century.
To know what is useful for a dog, one must study dog-nature. This nature itself is not to be deduced from the principle of
utility. Applying this to man, he that would criticise all human acts, movements, relations, etc., by the principle of utility,
must first deal with human nature in general, and then with human nature as modified in each historical epoch. Bentham makes
short work of it. With the driest naiveté he takes the modern shopkeeper, especially the English shopkeeper, as the normal man.
Whatever is useful to this queer normal man, and to his world, is absolutely useful. This yard-measure, then, he applies to past,
present, and future. The Christian religion, e.g., is "useful," "because it forbids in the name of religion the same faults that
the penal code condemns in the name of the law." Artistic criticism is "harmful," because it disturbs worthy people in their
enjoyment of Martin Tupper, etc. With such rubbish has the brave fellow, with his
motto, "nulla dies sine line!," piled up mountains of books. [8] |
” |
Marx's accusation is twofold. In the first place, he says that the theory of utility is true by definition and thus does not
really add anything meaningful. For Marx, a productive enquiry would have to investigate what sorts of things are good for
people; that is, what our nature (which he believes is alienated under
capitalism) really is. Second, he says that Bentham fails to take account of the changing character of people, and hence
the changing character of what is good for them. This criticism is especially important for Marx, because he believed that all
important statements were contingent upon particular historical conditions. Marx argues that human nature is dynamic, so the
concept of a single utility for all humans is one-dimensional and not useful. When he decries Bentham's application of the 'yard
measure' of now to 'the past, present and future', he decries the implication that society, and people, have always been, and
will always be, as they are now; that is, he criticizes essentialism. As he sees it, this
implication is conservatively used to reinforce institutions he regarded as reactionary.
Just because in this moment religion has some positive consequences, says Marx, doesn't mean that viewed historically it isn't a
regressive institution that should be abolished.
Marx's criticism is more a criticism of Bentham's views (or similar views) of utility, than utilitarianism itself.
Utilitarians would not deny that different things make different people happy, and that what promotes happiness changes over
time. Neither would utilitarians deny the importance of investigations into what promotes utility.
Marx's criticism applies to all philosophy which does not take explicit account of the movement of history (against
dialectics). While he's right that all things change, and that it is necessary to take account
of this when making practical judgements, this doesn't mean that it isn't useful to have a theory which gives some means to
evaluate those changes themselves.
Also, utilitarianism was originally developed as a challenge to the status quo. The demand that everyone count for one,
and one only, was anathema to the elitist society of Victorian Britain.
Criticism of other schools
One criticism is that many other schools cannot even in theory solve real world complex ethical problems when various
inviolable principles collide, like triage or if the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were the right decision.
A criticism of Kantianism is leveled by R. M. Hare in
Could Kant Have Been a Utilitarian?. He argued that a
number of different ethical positions could fit with Kant's description of his Categorical Imperative, and although Kant did not agree with this assessment, utilitarianism
could be among them.
See also
- This entry is related to, but not included in the Political ideologies series or one of
its sub-series. Other related articles can be found at the Politics Portal.
Notes
- ^ Rosen, Frederick (2003). Classical Utilitarianism from Hume to Mill.
Routledge, pg. 28. ISBN 0415220947 "It was Hume and Bentham who then reasserted most strongly the Epicurean doctrine concerning
utility as the basis of justice."
- ^ Mill, John Stuart. 'On Liberty', ed. Himmelfarb. Penguin Classics,
1974, Ed.'s introduction, p.11.
- ^ Mill, John Stuart. 'On Liberty', ed. Himmelfarb. Penguin
Classics, 1974, 'Introductory' of main text, p.68.
- ^ Borchard, Ruth (1957), John Stuart Mill, The Man. London:
Watts.
- ^ Dennett, Daniel (1995), Darwin's Dangerous Idea, Simon & Schuster, ISBN
0-684-82471-X.
- ^ Anthony Kenny What I Believe
p75-80
- ^ Waldron, Jeremy. 'Rights' in A Companion to Contemporary
Political Philosophy, ed. Goodin, Robert E. and Pettit, Philip. Blackwell Publishing, 1995, p.581.
- ^ [1]
References and further reading
- Cornman, James, et al. Philosophical Problems and Arguments - An Introduction, 4th edition Indianapolis, IN: Hackett
Publishing Co., 1992.
- Harwood, Sterling, "Eleven Objections to Utilitarianism," in Louis P. Pojman, ed., Moral Philosophy: A Reader, Indianapolis,
IN: Hackett Publishing Co., 2003), and in Sterling Harwood, ed., Business as Ethical and Business as Usual, Wadsworth Publishing
Co., 1996, Chapter 7.
- Lyons, David, "Forms and Limits of Utilitarianism". Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1965.
- Martin, Michael, "A Utilitarian Kantian Principle," Philosophical Studies, (with H. Ruf), 21, 1970, pp. 90-91.
- Silverstein, Harry S. A Defence of Cornman’s Utilitarian Kantian Principle, Philosophical Studies (Dordrecht u.a.) 23,
212-215. 1972
- Singer, Peter. The Expanding Circle: Ethics and Sociobiology, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1981. [ISBN
0-374-15112-1]
- Singer, Peter. Practical Ethics, 2nd edition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993. [ISBN 0-521-43971-X]
- Sumner, L. Wayne, Abortion: A Third Way, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
External links
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