Utilitarianism Flashcards

1
Q

The Hedonic Caculus includes:

A

Intensity, Duration, Certainty, Nearness, Fecundity, Purity, Extent

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2
Q

Fecundity is?

A

How likely it is that the pleasure from an action will be followed by similar pleasures

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3
Q

Nearness measures?

A

How close the pleasure is in time and space.

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4
Q

Who believes in Rule Utilitarianism and what is it?

A

John Mill - higher and lower pleasures It’s qualitative.

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5
Q

Is utilitarianism teleological or deontological?

A

Teleological

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6
Q

Who believes in Act Utilitarianism and what is it?

A

Jeremy Bentham - Hedonic Calculus, quantitative

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7
Q

Criticisms of Act Utilitarianism

A
Time and resource consuming.
Justifies any action.
Can be biased.
Not possible to assess every situation.
Difficult to take into account the effect on others/ in the long run.
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8
Q

Criticisms of Rule Utilitarianism

A

Rules might be pointless or immoral.

Minorities aren’t accounted for.

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9
Q

Hedonism

A

Bentham believes humans are motivated by pleasure

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10
Q

Positives of Act Utilitarianism

A

Flexible - takes into account individual situations.

A good action is one that leads to the greatest good in that situation.

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11
Q

Positives of Rule Utilitarianism

A

Leads to greatest result in the community.
Not as time consuming.
Still has absolute right and wrongs.

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12
Q

Examples of higher pleasures

A

Pleasures that stimulate the mind: learning, art, literature, opera.

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13
Q

Higher pleasures bring happiness?

A

In the long run

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14
Q

Mill believed Bentham’s utilitarianism does what?

A

It reduces humans - he thinks we have more than basic animal instincts.

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15
Q

Utilitarianism and religion both

A

Aim to maximise happiness and welfare for everyone.

Both aim to bring the ‘greatest’ happiness.

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16
Q

Utilitarianism is different to religion

A

It has no rules.
It has no moral absolutes.
It’s teleological (Christianity is denteological)
Main goals are happiness and pleasure.
People have to be autonomous agents (eg. not a baby or a person in a coma)

17
Q

What is the utility principle created by Bentham?

A

The rightness or wrongness of an action is determined by it’s usefulness (the amount of happiness/pleasure caused by it) which he came up with when he realised that pleasure and pain were important for finding what is moral

18
Q

Who said ‘an action is right if it produces the greatest good for the greatest number’

A

Jeremy Bentham

19
Q

What principle do Act utilitarians use?

A

The principle of utility should be directly applied to every individual situation where possible

20
Q

Who said ‘human beings have faculties more elevated than animal appetites’

A

John Stuart Mill

21
Q

Who says ‘it is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied’ and what does it mean

A

John Stuart Mill: it means that a higher pleasure is better than a lower, even if it might cause some dissatisfaction

22
Q

Who came up with preference utilitarianism?

A

The ethicist Peter Singer

23
Q

What is preference utilitarianism?

A

The best consequences means what furthers the best interests/preferences of those involved.

24
Q

How did philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre criticise utilitarianism?

A

He said that it could justify horrendous acts for the pleasure of many: eg. the persecution/extermination of Jews could be considered ‘good’ if the greater population found it pleasurable

25
Q

When can pain by considered good?

A

When training hard to excel in sport etc

26
Q

What did philosopher Henry Sidgwick reject Bentham’s view that people pursued their own pleasure for?

A

For ethical hedonism: people should seek general happiness

27
Q

Who said that it is quite compatible with the principle of utility that some kinds of pleasure are more desirable and valuable than others

A

John Stuart Mill

28
Q

Difficulties with Utilitarianism

A
  • It relies on knowledge of consequences.
  • Some pain is good for us and pleasure bad.
  • problem of justice: how is pleasure distributed.
29
Q

Who said ‘nature has placed mankind under the governance of pain and pleasure’

A

Jeremy Bentham

30
Q

Who said that pleasure and pain ‘point out what we ought to do as well as determine what we shall do’

A

Jeremy Betham

31
Q

Why is Mill’s utilitarianism similar to rule

A

He believed in universalisability.
We all desire happiness.
It is the only desirable thing as an end.
Therefore everyone has to aim for the happiness of everyone.

32
Q

Why is Mill’s utilitarianism qualitative

A

It is focused on the value and nature of the pleasure

33
Q

When does Mill allow rules to be broken

A

In exceptional circumstances

34
Q

What is strong rule

A

Rules should never be disobeyed, it’s the individual’s duty to obey.
Absolute rules are considered good for the happiness of the community.

35
Q

What is weak rule

A

There should be generally accepted rules/guidelines but they shouldn’t be obeyed indefinitely

36
Q

How did Bentham show his utilitarianism is quantitative quote

A

‘The quantity of pleasure being equal, push-pin is as good as poetry’

37
Q

What is the example of sadistic guards

A

They torture someone innocent, causing one person’s pain and the pleasure for many.

38
Q

What is the one intrinsic good

A

Happiness/utility