3D Classical Utilitarianism – Jeremy Bentham’s Act Utilitarianism: happiness as the basis of morality Flashcards

1
Q

Give an introduction to Bentham and utilitarianism.

A

• Bentham = originator of modern utilitarianism
- Barrister + expert in law
- Became a social reformer and sought to develop an ethical theory that promoted actions which would benefit the majority of society, rather than just the elite
• Basis for utilitarianism can be traced back to ancient Greece: Aristotle’s virtue ethics (pursuit of happiness) - eudaimonia
- Can be seen as part of the Enlightenment Era

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2
Q

What is the principle of utility?

A

• “that principle which approves or disapproves of an action on whether an action augments of diminishes happiness”
• Happiness = the “sovereign good” - the supreme ethical value ∵ it is good for people to be happy
- “When happiness is present, we have everything: but when it is absent, we do everything to possess it.”

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3
Q

What did Bentham claim was the basis for the principle of utility?

A

• A statement by Joseph Priestley: “the greatest happiness of the greatest number”

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4
Q

What does the French word ‘utilite’ mean, and how does this affect utilitarianism?

A
  • Usefulness

* The most useful end it that which maximises happiness

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5
Q

How is morality judged when using Bentham’s act utilitarianism?

A

• Judged on whether it promotes a balance of pleasure over pain

  • Good/right = outcome creates more pleasure than pain (happiness)
  • Bad/wrong = more pain than pleasure (unhappiness)
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6
Q

What is the hedonic (felicific) calculus, and why did Bentham create it?

A
  • An algorithm for calculating the degree or amount of pleasure that a specific action is likely to cause
  • Created it ∵ he accepted that measuring happiness = diff.
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7
Q

List the seven elements of the hedonic (felicific) calculus.

A

1) Intensity
2) Duration
3) Certainty
4) Propinquity (remoteness)
5) Fecundity (richness)
6) Purity
7) Extent

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8
Q

Are the elements in the hedonic (felicific) calculus equal or unequal?

A

• Equal
• Contrary to the belief that ‘extent’ is the most imp.
- If the other six criteria positively affect a smaller no. of ppl, extent can be ignored
• Contrary to the belief that the most pleasure is what is being pursued
- We should do the action that creates the biggest difference btwn pleasure and pain; it is no good doing an action that creates lots of pleasure but also lots of pain

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9
Q

Elaborate on the element of intensity, using an example.

A

• The stronger, the better - acute, potent rush of pleasure

- e.g. Having your favourite ice-cream

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10
Q

Elaborate on the element of duration, using an example.

A

• The longer-lasting, the better

- e.g. Having a huge ice-cream

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11
Q

Elaborate on the element of certainty, using an example.

A

• The surer that pleasure will result, the better

- e.g. Having an ice-cream you know you like

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12
Q

Elaborate on the element of propinquity (remoteness), using an example.

A

• The nearer the pleasure is, the better (present, not future)
- e.g. Having an ice-cream now rather than in two weeks

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13
Q

Elaborate on the element of fecundity (richness), using an example.

A

• The more chance the pleasure will be repeated, the better

- e.g. Buying an ice-cream machine

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14
Q

Elaborate on the element of purity, using an example.

A

• The least amount of pain involved, the better

- e.g. Having an ice cream flavour that everyone likes

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15
Q

Elaborate on the element of extent, using an example.

A

• The more people who experience it, the better

- e.g. Everyone in school having their favourite ice-cream flavour together

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16
Q

Give three words to describe Bentham’s act utilitarianism and elaborate on them.

A
  • Teleological (goal of happiness)
  • Consequentialist (outcome of greatest happiness for greatest no.)
  • Relativistic (no universal moral norms - each ‘act’ (situation) is different)
17
Q

Finish the sentence: although Bentham is said to be an act utilitarian…

A

• …he did not claim that it was necessary to calculate right/wrong of every act from the hedonic calculus

18
Q

What is act utilitarianism?

A

• A form of utilitarianism associated w/ Bentham that treats each moral situation as unique and applies the hedonic calculus to each act to see if it fulfils the ‘principle of utility’

19
Q

Finish the sentence and give a quote from Bentham: agents should create happiness up until…

A
  • …the point of their own death

* “Every day will invite you to add something to the pleasure of others”

20
Q

What is negative act utilitarianism?

A

• If all possible actions bring about more pain than pleasure, you do the action that brings the least amount of pain/unhappiness

21
Q

What are some similarities between act utilitarianism and situation ethics?

A
  • There is a guiding principle
  • Teleological
  • Not legalistic
22
Q

“Nature has placed mankind under the governance of two sovereign masters”. What are they?

A

• Pain and pleasure

  • “pleasure and pain alone point out what we ought to do”
  • Humanity = motivated by the avoidance of pain, and desire for pleasure (similar to hedonism)