3E John Stuart Mill’s development of Utilitarianism: types of pleasure, the harm principle, the use of rules Flashcards

1
Q

Mill, a former pupil of Bentham, had two criticisms of act utilitarianism; what were they?

A

1) Bentham was trying to measure pleasure in quantitative terms, which appeared to allow for some actions to be called good when to others they are wrong
- E.g. Bentham’s approach seemingly justifies gang rape ∵ the pleasure of the rapists exceeds that of the victim
- “It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied”
2) Act util. = too complex; applying the calculus is time consuming

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2
Q

How is Aristotle’s ‘eudaimonia’ close to Mill’s view?

A

• Eudaimonia ≠ mere gratification, but includes the idea of being well-fulfilled

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3
Q

What is Mill’s first change to act utilitarianism?

A

• Higher and lower pleasures

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4
Q

Elaborate on Mill’s first change to act utilitarianism (higher and lower pleasures).

A

• Shifted the focus from quantity of the pleasure/happiness
• Recognised that some pleasures were superior to others
• Mill = aware that often ppl did not choose the higher pleasure in preference for the lower; he felt this was ∵ they had not experienced both
• Mill recog. that ppl must satisfy the lower pleasures - you need to eat and sleep or procreate through sex, but you should aspire for the higher pleasures
• In Bentham’s, the pleasure that sadistic prison guards may get from torturing a prisoner = justified ∵ multiple of them
- In Mill’s, the pleasure of torture = a lower pleasure ∴ does not outweigh the acute pain of the prisone

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5
Q

What are higher pleasures?

A

• Intellectual; stimulate the mind

- E.g. reading philosophy, aesthetic appreciation, forgiveness

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6
Q

What are lower pleasures?

A

• Physical; stimulate the body

- Eating to satisfy hunger, sex

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7
Q

What was Mill’s second change to act utilitarianism?

A

• The harm principle

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8
Q

Give a brief background to the harm principle

A
  • Like Bentham, Mill was interested in social reform (he was a civil servant, MP, and political economist)
  • Mill introduced the idea of universalisability; what is right/wrong for one person is right/wrong for all - happiness is the only thing desirable as an end ∴ everyone ought to aim at the happiness of everyone (collective happiness)
  • This led him to develop the harm principle
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9
Q

Elaborate on Mill’s second change to act utilitarianism (the harm principle).

A
  • Bentham’s a.u. = criticised for potentially allowing evil actions to be justified
  • Mill believed, as Bentham did, that individuals should have the freedom (liberty) to do what they like when trying to create pleasure/happiness; as collective happiness = as imp. as individual, it should be of concern that others are happy too
  • An individual’s liberty to create happiness should have one exception: indiv.s should not have the freedom to harm another indiv. - they should not indulge their own pleasures if it affects the pleasure of others and brings them pain
  • “The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilised community, against their will, is to prevent harm to others.”
  • ∴ criticism = addressed ∵ the torturers (for example) should be stopped from the action from which they get happiness ∵ they are harming another human being, despite the fact that they are creating more pleasure than pain
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10
Q

Despite his two changes, why did Mill realise that act utilitarianism was still a challenging ethic to follow? What did he therefore do?

A
  • ∵ of its complexity, esp. when applying the calculus

* He ∴ developed a further change that became known as rule utilitarianism

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11
Q

Explain rule utilitarianism.

A

• Previous moral experiences could help in moral decision making: moral agents become aware that certain actions always bring about happiness
• Mill believed there were universal deontological rules (hence the name) that society could follow which would bring the maximum outcome of happiness e.g. being kind
• “Mankind must by this time have acquired positive beliefs as to effects of some actions on their happiness”
• Good/right = Following a deontological rule that creates the outcome (telos) of maximising pleasure over pain
• Bad/wrong = Breaking a deontological rule that creates the outcome (telos) of maximising pleasure over pain
∴ despite being deontological, r.u. has teleological elements ∵ the moral agent is only following the rules with aim of creating the biggest gap btwn pleasure and pain

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12
Q

What is a key benefit of rule utilitarianism?

A

• Moral agents no longer need to use the slow hedonic calculus ∵ they can now follow the relevant rule in every moral dilemma

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13
Q

Give a difference between act and rule utilitarianism.

A

• Act: follows teleological principle of utility
- Abortion: consider each individual act of abortion and apply the hedonic calculus
• Rule: Follows a set of deontological rules
- Abortion: if the general exp. = that abortion brings greatest balance pleasure, accepting would be the deontological rule, which would be applied to all cases

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14
Q

What is the difference between strong and weak rule utilitarianism?

A

• Strong: Following the rules w/ no exception
• Weak: The rule can be broken in exceptional circumstances (which Mill never clearly defined) and the moral egent can switch back to using a.u. + use hedonic calc.
- E.g. ‘do not kill’ might be broken in WWII if a person had the opp. to kill Hitler
- A hybrid of teleological + deontological

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15
Q

Did Mill favour strong or weak rule utilitarianism?

A

• Weak

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