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Developed the utilitarianism of Bentham into "rule utilitarianism."
Mill described Bentham's ethics as "swine ethics" due to the theory leads to the tyranny of the majority.
"it is better to be a Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied."- Mill
Liberal principle: humans are the best judge of their own happiness & as such should be given maximum freedom or liberty to live their lives as they consider appropriate. "My right to swing my arm ends where your nose begins" The harm principle: that an individual's actions and freedoms should not bring harm to another individual. Rule utilitarianism: you should follow rules that will generally bring the greatest happiness to the greatest number of people over time.
Mill disagreed with Bentham's use of utility to judge every action as happiness is too complex for this simple understanding of moral decisions.
"Although I entirely agree with Bentham in his principle, I do not agree with him that all right thinking on the details of morals depends on its explicit assertion. I think that utility or happiness is much too complex and indefinite a goal to be sought except through various intermediate goals" – Mill.
We should therefore draw on the wisdom of the past to decide what produces happiness and avoids suffering.
"Secondary principles" provide us with general rules and guidelines and a result of what society shows produces the best result.
Mill believed that there are different qualities of pleasure.
This meant that we should also measure pleasure qualitatively, before we measure it quantitively. Lower forms of pleasure:
Food
Drink
Drugs
Sex Higher forms of pleasure:
Passion
Love
Appreciation for Art
Poetry
Knowledge đź’ˇThis way we work towards the pleasures that will have the greatest impact on society. Rather than aligning with hedonism, he thought we should be moving towards human flourishing
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