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Theory of Utilitarianism

Utilitarianism argues that an action is morally right if it produces the greatest happiness for the greatest number. Jeremy Bentham first proposed utilitarianism and developed the concept of a "felicific calculus" to quantify pleasure and pain from actions. John Stuart Mill later refined utilitarianism, arguing that higher intellectual and spiritual pleasures should be valued over lower physical pleasures. Mill also believed that individual rights are justified if they contribute to overall happiness and the greatest good for society.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
161 views25 pages

Theory of Utilitarianism

Utilitarianism argues that an action is morally right if it produces the greatest happiness for the greatest number. Jeremy Bentham first proposed utilitarianism and developed the concept of a "felicific calculus" to quantify pleasure and pain from actions. John Stuart Mill later refined utilitarianism, arguing that higher intellectual and spiritual pleasures should be valued over lower physical pleasures. Mill also believed that individual rights are justified if they contribute to overall happiness and the greatest good for society.
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What would be more

ethical? Killing one


person in front of 5
people or killing 5
person in front of
one person?
Meaning of Utilitarianism
1

2 JEREMY BENTHAM

The Principle of Utility


3

4 JOHN STUART MILL

5 Principle of The Greatest Number

6 Justice and Moral Rights


Utilitarianism is an ethical theory that argues for the goodness of pleasure and the
determination of right behavior based on the usefulness of the actions consequences. This
means that pleasure is good and that the goodness of action is determined by its usefulness.
Putting these ideas together, utilitarianism claims that one’s action and behavior are good in
as much as they are directed toward the experience of which refers to the usefulness of the
consequences of one’s action and behavior. When we argue that the drug war program of
the present government is permissible because doing so results in better public safety
, then we are arguing in a utilitarian way. It is utilitarian because we argue that some
individual rights can be sacrificed for the sake of the greater happiness of the many.
Their system of ethics emphasizes the consequences of actions:
This means that the goodness or the badness of an action is based on whether it is useful in contri-
buting to a specific purpose for the greatest number of people.

Utilitarianism is consequentialist:
This means that the moral value of actions and decisions is based solely or greatly on the usefulness
of their consequences; it is the usefulness of results that determines whether the action or behavior
is good or bad.

The utilitarian value pleasure and happiness:


This means that the usefulness of actions is based on its promotion of happiness as the experience
of pleasure for the greatest number of persons, even at the expense of some individual rights.
JEREMY BENTHAM
JEREMY BENTHAM UTILITARIANISM
Born on february 15,1748 in
london, england. Died on
❑Intellectual inheritor of David
June 6, 1832. Hume
❑Recognized as ‘Act Utilitarian’
He was the teacher of
James Mill, father of John
❑Right actions result in ‘good or
Stuart Mill. pleasure,’ wrong actions result
in pain or absence of pleasure.
Bentham first wrote about the ❑The Principle of Utility
greatest happiness principle of ❑Law and Social Hedonism
ethics and was known for a
system of penal management ❑Felicific Calculus
called PANOPTICON.
JEREMY BENTHAM

In the book An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789), Jeremy Bentham begins by
arguing that our actions are governed by two “sovereign masters”--which he calls pleasure and pain. These “masters” are
given to us by nature to help us determine what is good or bad and what ought to be done and not; they fasten our choices
to their throne.
The principle of utility is about our subjection to these sovereign masters: PLEASURE and PAIN.
On one hand, the principle refers to the motivation of our actions as guided by our avoidance of pain and
our desire for pleasure. It is like saying that in our everyday actions, we do what is pleasure as good if, and only if, they
produce more happiness than unhappiness. This means that it is not enough to experience pleasure, but to also inquire
whether the things we do make us happier. Having identified the tendency for pleasure and the avoidance of pain as the
principle of utility, Bentham equates happiness with pleasure.

Actions that lead to PLEASURE ARE RIGHT, ones that produce PAIN ARE WRONG.
JEREMY BENTHAM

➢ Government should not pass laws that protect tradition, customs or rights
➢ Government should base all laws on the happiness principle
The greatest happiness for the greatest number
➢ Bentham’s theory is both empirical (how much pain or pleasure is caused by the act or policy) and democratic
(each individual’s happiness is as important as anyother’s)

Ethics as Greatest Happiness


➢ Moral worth judged by presumed effect
➢ Action guided by pleasure/pain
JEREMY BENTHAM

FELICIFIC CALCULUS- common currency framework that calculates the pleasure that some actions can produce.

In this framework, an action can be evaluated on the basis of intensity or strength of pleasure;
❖ DURATION or length of the experience of pleasure.
❖ CERTAINTY, UNCERTAINTY, or the likelihood that pleasure will occur; and
❖ PROPINQUITY, REMOTENESS, or how soon there will be pleasure.
These indicators allow us to measure and pain in actions, we need to consider THREE MORE DIMENSIONS:
❖ FECUNDITY or the chance it has of being followed by sensations of the same kind
❖ PURITY or the chance it has of not being followed by sensations of the opposite kind.
❖ Lastly, when considering the number of persons who are affected by pleasure or pain, another dimension is to be
considered -- EXTENT.
JEREMY BENTHAM

Felicific calculus allows the evaluation of all actions and their resultant pleasure. This
means that actions are evaluated on this single scale regardless of preferences and
values. In this sense, pleasure and pain can only quantitatively differ but not qualitatively
differ from other experiences of pleasure and pain accordingly.
JOHN STUART MILL
Was born on May
He studied Greek at the 20, 1806 in Penton-
age of three and Latin at ville, London,
His ethical theory and his the age of eight. He wro-
United Kingdom.
defense of te a history of Roman
Law age eleven. He was Died on May 8, 1873
utilitarian views are in Avignon, France
married to Harriet Taylor
found in his long after 21 years of friend- from Erysipelas.
essay entitled ship.
UTILITARANISM (1861).

❑ A more sophisticated form of Utilitarianism.


❑ Concerned with quality of pleasure and quantity of people who enjoy it.
❑ Recognized higher and lower types of human pleasure.
❑ PRINCIPLE OF GREATEST NUMBER
❑ JUSTICE AND MORAL RIGHTS
➢ Mill dissents from Bentham’s single scale of pleasure. He thinks that the principle of
utility must distinguish pleasures QUALITATIVELY and not merely quantitatively.
➢ For Mill, utilitarianism cannot promote the kind of pleasures appropriate to pigs or to
any other animals. He thinks that there are HIGHER INTELLECTUAL and LOWER BASE
PLEASURES.
Lower pleasures: eating, drinking, sexuality, etc.
Higher pleasures: intellectuality, creativity and spirituality.

"It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied; better


to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied.”
JOHN STUART MILL
JOHN STUART MILL

❑ Utilitarianism cannot lead to selfish acts. It is neither about our pleasure nor happiness alone; it cannot be all
about us. If we are the only ones satisfied by our actions, it does not constitute a moral good. In this sense, utilitar-
ianism is not dismissive of sacrifices that procure more happiness for others.
❑ Utilitarianism is interested with the best consequence for the highest number of people. It is not interested with
the intention of the agent. Moral value cannot discernible in the intention or motivation of the person doing the act;
it is based solely and exclusively on the difference it makes on the world’s total amount of pleasure and pain.

Utilitarianism is interested with everyone’s happiness, in fact, the greatest happiness of the greatest number.
JOHN STUART MILL
JOHN STUART MILL

➢ When we call anything a person’s right, we mean that he has a valid claim
on society to protect him in the possession of it, either by the force of law
, or by that education and opinion. If he has what we consider a sufficient
claim, on whatever account, to have something guaranteed to him by
society, we say that he has a right to it.
➢ The right to due process, the right to free speech or religion, and others
are justified because they contribute to the general good. This means that
society is made happier if its citizens are able to live their lives knowing
that their interest are protected and that society (as a whole) defends it.
JOHN STUART MILL

➢ A right is justifiable on utilitarian principles in as much as they produce an overall happ-


iness that is greater than the unhappiness resulting from their implementation.
➢ Mill creates a distinction between legal rights and their justification. He points out that
when legal rights are not morally justified in accordance to the greatest happiness prin-
ciple, then these rights need neither be observed, nor be respected. This is like saying
that there are instances when the law is not morally justified and, in this case, even
objectionable.

In short, Mill’s moral rights and considerations of justice are not absolute, but are only justified by
their consequences to promote the greatest good of the greatest number.
BETHAMITE MILLSIAN
o No one pleasure is inherently Some pleasures are better than others
better than any other o If you party and get drunk every day,
o If drunken parties make you then you won’t be as happy as you
happy, then go for it! otherwise might be.
o Reading poetry isn’t better than o Enjoying poetry is better than watching
watching The Bachelor, it’s just bad TV. And if you disagree, it is because
different. you don’t understand quality.

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