1 / 22

Revision Notes

Revision Notes . Utilitarianism. General. Long history - Epicurus, Caiaphas, Hume, Adam Smith Characterised by Pojman as teleological aspect and utility aspect e.g. of punishment . Bentham’s Utilitarianism. Pleasure and pain 'sovereign masters' Pleasure the only intrinsic good

devona
Télécharger la présentation

Revision Notes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Revision Notes • Utilitarianism

  2. General • Long history - Epicurus, Caiaphas, Hume, Adam Smith • Characterised by Pojman as teleological aspect and utility aspect • e.g. of punishment

  3. Bentham’s Utilitarianism • Pleasure and pain 'sovereign masters' • Pleasure the only intrinsic good • Right actions increase total pleasure

  4. Principles • Greatest Happiness Principle or Principle of Utility • Teleological/consequentialist

  5. Application • Empirical (Hume) and response to rationalists (Descartes) • Hedonistic Calculus: Extent, certainty, duration, nearness, fruitfulness, purity, intensity • Applies to Individuals and groups

  6. Strengths • Simple, • commonsensical, • scientific, • impartial

  7. Weaknesses • Justice, • consequences, • comparable pleasures, • 'pig philosophy'

  8. Mill’s Utilitarianism • We seek happiness • So we seek the happiness of others • So happiness is something we ought to seek for ourselves and others

  9. Quality not quantity • Competent judges • Experience of both • 'better to be Socrates dissatisfied'

  10. Acts as one of group of acts • tendencies known • 'some consequences accidental; others are its natural result'

  11. Justice • everyone counts as one • all equal worth

  12. Strengths • distributive justice, • consequences, • Socrates satisfied

  13. Weaknesses • punitive justice, • other intrinsic goods, • complexity

  14. Philosophical problems • Naturalistic fallacy (GEMoore); • Jump from egoism to altruism (Mackie) but rational benevolence (Sidgwick) and education (Warnock/Mill)

  15. Act • GHP applied to acts • “An act is right and only if it results in as much good as any available alternative” • From acts general rules deduced • Bentham and Mill?

  16. Response • But special responsibilities (Brandt)

  17. Rule • GHP applied to rules • “An act is right if and only if it is required by a rule that is itself a member of a set of rules whose acceptance would lead to greater utility for society than any available alternative” • From rules acts deduced as wrong • Brandt, Smart, Nielsen • Mill and 'tendencies'

  18. Preference • Individuals decide what is pain/pleasure for them • Preferences unless outweighed by others • e.g. Peter Singer and abortion.

  19. General Strengths • Simplicity but Mill/Hedonic Calculus • Social change and Bentham • Purpose of morality (Aristotle/Epicurus/Pojman)

  20. General Weaknesses • Incommensurate values (number/happiness) but internal debate • Immeasurable consequences but Mill and CILewis (actual/expected/intended consequences) • No rest; no personal integrity; not for all as difficult to follow (Pojman) • Justice but Mill (punitive/distributive) • Intuition and intrinsic/instrumental values and absurd implications (WDRoss) • Ends and Means (Kant)

  21. General responses • Split level utilitarianism (general/lower: rule, rare but difficult/higher: act)

  22. Overall response • Kant and categorical imperative • So right on purpose of morality wrong on need for rules and justice • Frankena and principles of beneficence and justice • Or Ross, objectivism and actual vs.. prima facie duties

More Related