Utilitarianism

John Stuart Mill

ISBN: 978-0872206052

Release: 01/1861

Utilitarianism by John Stuart Mill

John Stuart Mill's book Utilitarianism is a classic exposition and defence of utilitarianism in ethics. The essay first appeared as a series of three articles published in Fraser's Magazine in 1861; the articles were collected and reprinted as a single book in 1863.

 

Mill took many elements of his version of utilitarianism from Jeremy Bentham, the great nineteenth-century legal reformer, who along with William Paley were the two most influential English utilitarians prior to Mill. Like Bentham, Mill believed that happiness (or pleasure, which both Bentham and Mill equated with happiness) was the only thing humans do and should desire for its own sake. Since happiness is the only intrinsic good, and since more happiness is preferable to less, the goal of the ethical life is to maximize happiness. This is what Bentham and Mill call "the principle of utility" or "the greatest-happiness principle." Both Bentham and Mill thus endorse "classical" or "hedonistic" forms of utilitarianism. More recent utilitarians often deny that happiness is the sole intrinsic good, arguing that a variety of values and consequences should be considered in ethical decision making.

Although Mill agreed with Bentham about many of the foundational principles of ethics, he also had some major disagreements. In particular, Mill tried to develop a more refined form of utilitarianism that would harmonize better with ordinary morality and highlight the importance in the ethical life of intellectual pleasures, self-development, high ideals of character, and conventional moral rules.

Find pdf, epub and mobi files bellow:

You might like these:

A Philosophical Dictionary Volume 06 by Voltaire

The Enlightenment saw the creation of a new way of structuring information in bo...

More
Theologico-Political Treatise Part II by Baruch Spinoza

In the treatise, Spinoza put forth his most systematic critique of Judaism, and...

More
Apology by Plato

The Apology of Socrates, written by Plato, is a Socratic dialogue of the speech...

More