Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill The Utilitarians



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Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill

  • The Utilitarians


Presentation Overview

  • A brief history of England from 1748-1873

  • Basic Utilitarianism

  • Jeremy Bentham

    • Background
    • Utilitarianism
  • John Stuart Mill

    • Background
    • Utilitarianism


Historical Background

  • The years 1748-1873 were full of change:

    • Scientific advancement
    • Revolutions (the American and French)
    • Exploration/Colonization
    • Social and Religious reform
    • Industrialization
    • New Modes of Transportation


Utilitarianism

  • Focuses on actions and consequences rather than intentions

  • States that we should act in a way that will benefit the largest number of people

  • So, Utilitarianism demands that individuals put aside their own desires and ambitions and do what will benefit society as a whole

  • “It is the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of right and wrong” (A Fragment on Government)



A Brief Biography of Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)

  • Born in London, England

  • A child prodigy: read as a young toddler and studied Latin at age three

  • Studied law at Queen’s College, Oxford, England

  • Instead of practicing law, he spent his life looking for and writing about ways in which existing laws could be improved



Bentham’s Principle of Utility

  • Pain and pleasure dictate how people think they should behave, and, more importantly, how they actually do behave

  • So, according to Bentham (and behavioral psychologists) people will act in a manner that increases the likelihood of pleasure and reduces the likelihood of pain as the result of their action(s)



Pleasure and Pain

  • Types of Pleasure:

  • Sense

  • Wealth

  • Skill

  • Amity

  • Power

  • Piety

  • Benevolence

  • Malevolence

  • Memory

  • Imagination

  • Expectation

  • Friendship

  • Relief



How to Measure Pleasure and Pain

  • What to take into account when measuring pleasure and pain:

  • intensity

  • duration

  • certainty or uncertainty

  • propinquity (nearness) or remoteness

  • fecundity (productiveness)-the chance pleasure or pain has to be followed by the same

  • Purity-the chance pleasure or pain has to not be followed by the opposite

  • Extent

  • “Sum up” all the above to see if an action has the potential to result in pleasure or pain



In Summary, Bentham thought that,

  • People are motivated by pleasure and pain-avoidance

  • The amount of pleasure in the world should be increased

  • Laws should increase the amount of pleasure in the community and not increase the amount of pain

  • Punishment should only be used when it was absolutely necessary and should be proportional to the offense; he did not believe in groundless, needless, ineffectual, or expensive punishment



A Brief Biography of John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)

  • Born in London, England

  • Son of James Mill, a philosopher, economist, and East India Company official

  • Educated by his father and Jeremy Bentham

  • Suffered a nervous breakdown at twenty and credited his recovery to Romantic poetry

  • East India Company officer and Liberal MP for Westminster



John Mill promoted social reform, individualism, and women’s rights



On Liberty

  • The right to be an individual

  • Mill was afraid that people were pressured to conform, and so he wrote this essay that championed originality

  • Limits of authorities of society (i.e. the government) over individual rights

  • Mill wrote that people should be allowed to do what they pleased as long as they were not hurting themselves or anyone else

  • Mill was criticized both for the ideas in the book and because many people thought his wife, Harriet, had too much to do with the writing of the book



Utilitarianism

  • John Stuart Mill thought that people were reading Bentham’s theory of utility but not fully understanding it

  • He wrote Utilitarianism to defend and expand on Bentham’s theory

  • Mill called Bentham’s theory of utility the “Greatest Happiness Principle”



The Greatest Happiness Principle

  • “The creed which accepts as the foundation of morals, Utility, or the Greatest Happiness Principle, holds that actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness, wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness.”



Utilitarianism Continued

  • Mill separates pleasures into two categories: higher (i.e., friendship, knowledge, etc.) and

  • lower (i.e., pleasures of the senses)

  • The higher pleasures were more valuable than the lower

  • So, an action should be evaluated not only by Bentham’s criteria (Does it produce pleasure or pain? What is the intensity and duration?), but also by the type of pleasure or pain an action has the potential to produce



Utilitarianism Continued

  • Mill went on to acknowledge another criticism of Bentham’s Utilitarianism: people are inherently selfish, so it is practically impossible to act in an utilitarian manner, which demands that people be selfless

  • Mill wrote that most people do not always need to think about the happiness of the entire world’s population when they act, but they should take into consideration how their actions could effect those around them



Conclusion

  • Bentham and Mill’s Utilitarianism stated that people should act in a way that was the most beneficial for their community, country, etc.

  • Laws should also benefit most of society

  • “It is the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of right and wrong”



Questions?



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