Utilitarianism Flashcards
Two famous quotes about Utilitarianism
“the greatest good for the greatest number.”
“nature has placed humanity under the governance of two sovereign masters, pleasure and pain.”
What theory does it follow?
theory of utility - how useful things are
Joseph Priestley
- coined phrase GG4GN
- said in essay of the first principals of government
- so stated Utilitarianism as a political theory not academic
Concerned with….
consequences rather than actions
Jeremy Benthams background
*Studies law - wrote pieces like “Fragments of Government”(1776) to attack english law, calling it a mess as it had no logical scientific foundation.
What was Benthams concern?
That morality was being diversified because it rested on a multiplicity of foundations (bible, conscience, church…) and was therefore too subjective (relative)
so he had political theories
Important thing about Bentham?
He began by defining human nature as something which is motivated by pleasure and pain.
In this he was viewed as a hedonist (someone who seeks pleasure)
What did Bentham believe?
- that from observing the world it could be reasoned that humans naturally seek pleasure and avoid pain
- He said “nature has placed humanity under the governance of two sovereign masters, pleasure and pain.”
- Therefore laws (the good) should be grounded in the objective truth of maximising pleasure and minimising pain for majority of people.
How and what did Bentham develop?
- from the basic premise that pain and pleasure are important qualities for determining whats moral, Bentham developed the ‘utility principle’
- rightness and wrongness of an action is determined by its usefulness - amount of please from action.
What is the Hedonic Calculus?
Way to decide whether an action is moral
Intensity Duration (how long) Certainty (definite) Purity (unique, unadulterated) Extent (how much) Remoteness (rare) Richness (multi-sensory)
Criticisms of Hedonic Calculus
- Main criticism - Tyranny of the Majority - taking theory at face value, it could allow racism & cultural ignorance in a country where the majority of people are white.
- tramples over rights/desires of individual in pursuit of GG4GN
- its consequentialist to the absurd - too concerned with ends and takes no account of motives
e. g. for Bentham its acceptable to commit act for the wrong reasons, even if its immoral, if it produces long term pleasure for greatest number. - can we really define happiness and what counts as pleasure?
- Predictive in nature (tries to foresee the future) - attempts to measure the immeasurable.
- Were measuring future events - motives can’t be measured only consequences. The future events arent guaranteed - won’t know consequences until they happen.
Mill and his background
John stuart Mill
- godson of Bentham
- child prodigy but pressure was too much and had a break down in teens
- recovered and went into law/politics and continued to develop utilitarianism
Mills views on utilitarianism
- thought Bentham’s theory was limited to law - law makers concerned with promoting pleasure, thus aimed to improve Benthams basic theory
- So introduced ‘On Liberty’ 1863 a version of theory of utility for the common man which also sustained ‘pleasure’ for ‘happiness’ and wanted to evoke the quality not quantity of happiness.
Famous quote by Mill
“it is better to be a human dissatisfied than a pig satisfied; better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied”
What did Mill introduce?
his emphasis on quality as well as quantity cased h to distinguish between lower physical pleasures (satisfaction of hunger, thirst) and higher mental pleasure (theatre, literature…) to evoke intellect.