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UTILITARIANISM
Utilitarianism
2




     Jeremy Bentham (1748 – 1831)


     Act Utilitarianism

     The morally right act for an agent A at a time
     t, is that act available to A at t, that will
     maximize the total amount of good in the
     world (that will have the best consequences)



    “The greatest good for the greatest
      number”
Hedonistic Utilitarianism
3



    What is good?


        Pleasure and the absence of pain are good


    Pleasure is any sensation you would rather have
    than no sensation at all; and pain is any sensation
    you’d rather not have than no sensation at all.




    .
What Bentham thinks are the
     advantages of Utilitarianism
4



     Neutralistic – treats everyone in the same way

     Realistic – it’s based on real psychology. It works with
      people as it finds them and organizes society so that they
      being that way actually has good consequences for
      everyone.

     Non-metaphysical – it doesn't make goodness/badness
      right/wrongness some sort of weird qualities. What in the
      world is “a natural right?”

     Non-elitist – it counts all sentient creatures. And all types of
      pleasures equally

     Determinate in principle – in principle, you can use the
      hedonic calculus to get an actual answer to the
      question of “what should I do in this case?”.
The Hedonic Calculus
5




    For each action-alternative:

       Determine Intensity x duration

       Determine Probability

       Calculate Total = (intensity x duration) x Probability



    Perform the action-alternative with the highest
     total
The Hedonic Calculus: what should I do with my
      $50
6



    If I buy CALL OF DUTY: Black Ops II
    • I will receive pleasure of 7 intensity for 30 hours.
      The probably of this is high – 80%.

        • The impact on me: 7 x 30 x .8 = 168 hedons

    • My wife will be probably be somewhat annoyed
      that I’m wasting my time and using up the TV. (-3
      intensity for 5 hours at probability of 50%)

        • The impact on her: -3 x 5 x .5 = - 7.5
          hedons

    TOTAL IMPACT: 160.5 hedons
The Hedonic Calculus: what should I do with my
      $50
7



    If I donate the money to a children’s
       charity:
    • I will receive pleasure of 3 intensity for 50 hours.
      The probably of this is high – 80%.

        • The impact on me: 3 x 50 x .8 = 120 hedons

    • 50 Starving children will be cared for, each
      receiving a pleasure of 9 intensity for 100 hours.
      The probability for this is very high – 90%.

        • The impact on her: 50 x 9 x .9 = 405 hedons

    TOTAL IMPACT: 525 hedons
The Hedonic Calculus: what should I do with my
    $50
8




    1. If I buy myself Black Ops II, the world
       will be improved by 160.5 hedons
    2. If I donate the money to a children’s
       charity the world will be improved by
       525 hedons
    3. I should do whatever will bring about
       the greatest pleasure in the world
    4. I should donate the money to the
       charity
An important distinction
9




    What is the right action for you to do? The action that a
    good person would do?

                           The subjectively right act – the act
                            you believe will maximize utility.

                           The objectively right act – the act
                            that will actually maximize utility

                           The epistemically right act – the
                            act that you are rationally warranted
                            to perform.
How do we regard different types of
     pleasures?
10



      What counts as pleasure?

       What about sadistic and masochistic pleasures?

       Bentham: the source of pleasure doesn’t matter

      Are there higher and lower pleasures?

        Bentham: It’s a subjective criterion – “Pushpin is as
       good as poetry”

        J.S. Mill: There is an objective quality to different
         pleasures that should also be factor into our
         calculations

           Quality comes from what people would choose if
            they had access to all possible pleasures
Are all goods commensurable?
11


     Can all pleasures be roughly compared? Can they be
     reduced to some sort of homogenous value?
Intellectual skill development:
           Objection by counter-example
12




        An objection shows that there’s
         something wrong with the theory or
         with one the assumptions that
         supports that theory.

        A counter-example is a specific
         case to which the theory gives the
         wrong answer according to our
         ordinary intuitions
Counter-examples and
13
     Utilitarianism

     Assumptions made by Bentham’s Act
     Utilitarianism:
      ①   The right action is the one that maximizes the
          total balanced of pleasure in the world
      ②   The source of pleasure doesn't matter
      ③   Each person is to count for one, and none for
          more than one
      ④   Tradeoffs of cost to some for gains to others
          are acceptable
      ⑤   Values are homogenous
Criticisms of Utilitarianism
14



       It’s too difficult to apply

       People care about more than just pleasure

       We can not reduce all human goods into quantifiable
        units which can be aggregated and compared

       There is no non-arbitrary limit to how far into the future we
        should consider consequences

       Intention is important for determining the moral
        status of actions, but no room for this in utilitarianism

       Justifies acts that seem to be plainly wrong like
        murder and rape
Other forms of Utilitarianism
15




        Rule Utilitarianism - Always act
         according to the rule that would
         produce the most utility in the world
         (vs. “act” utilitarianism)

      Preference Utilitarianism: Always
       act so as to maximize satisfaction of
       people’s preferences (vs. “Hedonistic”
       Utilitarianism)
Mill’s personal relationship to
Bentham
                 Son of Bentham’s best friend
                 Raised to be the perfect
                  Utilitarian
                 Prodigy – Oxford by 12
                 Became an amazing Utilitarian
                  thinking machine completely
                  committed to the cause
                 Had a complete mental
                  breakdown by the time he was
                  21 followed by disabling
                  clinical depression
                 This caused him to rethink the
                  basic assumptions of
                  Utilitarianism
Mill’s central correction to
    Utilitarianism

o   Pleasures differ in quality as well as
    in quantity                              “The Decided Preference
                                             Criterion”:
o   Humans prefer the higher
    pleasures – those activities that        “Of two pleasures … if one of the
    engage their higher faculties            two is, by those who are
                                             competently acquainted with
o   Higher pleasures are always going to     both, placed so far above the other
    trump lower pleasures – have an          than they prefer it… and would not
    infinite value by comparison.            resign it for any quality of the other
                                             pleasure … we are justified in
o   Hedonic calculus can’t help us           ascribing to it a superiority in
    decide what is right anymore – we        quality…”
    need something else                                       - Utilitarianism, Ch. II
We want happiness not

    contentment one would be
    There are things almost no
    willing to trade for no amount of something
    else

   Therefore, The most satisfactory life for anyone
    will contain a mix of higher and lower
    pleasures

       "it is better to be a human being
        dissatisfied than a pig satisfied”

       “it is better to be Socrates
        dissatisfied than a fool satisfied”
   This is true as a matter of empirical fact – its
    what people want out of life. We want to be
    proud of our lives. We want to live with human
A good enough life?


o   A life with few and transitory pains

o   A life with many and various
    pleasures

o   A life that is more active than
    passive

o   A life lived with a realistic
    expectation of one’s prospects
What sort of life is a good (enough)
life?

               There are as many different
                kinds of good lives as there are
                individual persons:
                 Different  mixes of excitement and
                  tranquility
                 Different combinations of higher
                  and lower pleasures
               Unique individuals require
                unique recipes for happiness
Differences between Bentham and
Mill
Mill’s Utilitarian principle: Actions are right in proportion to
their tendency to increase the greatest happiness for the
greatest number.
Bentham’s Utilitarianism            Mill’s “Utilitarianism” (?)


   Hedonistic                         Non-hedonistic

                                       Pleasures vary in quality
   Pleasures are homogeneous
                                       Non-maximizing. Aims for a
                                        threshhold of happiness
   Maximizing
                                       Sensitive to distribution
   Indifferent to distribution
Williams’s “Integrity objection” against
     Utilitarianism
22



      Jim is a botanist doing research in a
      South American country led by a
      brutal dictator. One day he finds
      himself in the central square of a
      small town facing 20 Indians who
      have been randomly captured and
      tied up as an example of what will
      happen to rebels. The army captain
      tells Jim that if he agrees to kill one
      of the Indians, the others will be
      released in honor of Jim’s status as a
      guest. If, however, Jim refuses, then
      all the Indians will be shot.

             What should Jim do?
Williams’s “Integrity objection” against
     Utilitarianism
23


                           There’s a crucial moral distinction between
                            what happens and what I do
                           Without this distinction we can not
                            understanding what it means to have
                            integrity
                           Moral integrity requires the individual to
                            view himself as a moral agent whose
                            actions flow “from projects or attitudes
                            which in some cases he takes seriously at
                            the deepest level, as what his life is
                            about”

                           Utilitarianism can’t understand this notion of
                            moral integrity, because it leaves no room
                            for describing the ethical importance of the
                            relationship between our
                            projects, identity, and actions.

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Phil21 wk6 utilitarianism

  • 2. Utilitarianism 2 Jeremy Bentham (1748 – 1831) Act Utilitarianism The morally right act for an agent A at a time t, is that act available to A at t, that will maximize the total amount of good in the world (that will have the best consequences) “The greatest good for the greatest number”
  • 3. Hedonistic Utilitarianism 3 What is good? Pleasure and the absence of pain are good Pleasure is any sensation you would rather have than no sensation at all; and pain is any sensation you’d rather not have than no sensation at all. .
  • 4. What Bentham thinks are the advantages of Utilitarianism 4  Neutralistic – treats everyone in the same way  Realistic – it’s based on real psychology. It works with people as it finds them and organizes society so that they being that way actually has good consequences for everyone.  Non-metaphysical – it doesn't make goodness/badness right/wrongness some sort of weird qualities. What in the world is “a natural right?”  Non-elitist – it counts all sentient creatures. And all types of pleasures equally  Determinate in principle – in principle, you can use the hedonic calculus to get an actual answer to the question of “what should I do in this case?”.
  • 5. The Hedonic Calculus 5 For each action-alternative:  Determine Intensity x duration  Determine Probability  Calculate Total = (intensity x duration) x Probability Perform the action-alternative with the highest total
  • 6. The Hedonic Calculus: what should I do with my $50 6 If I buy CALL OF DUTY: Black Ops II • I will receive pleasure of 7 intensity for 30 hours. The probably of this is high – 80%. • The impact on me: 7 x 30 x .8 = 168 hedons • My wife will be probably be somewhat annoyed that I’m wasting my time and using up the TV. (-3 intensity for 5 hours at probability of 50%) • The impact on her: -3 x 5 x .5 = - 7.5 hedons TOTAL IMPACT: 160.5 hedons
  • 7. The Hedonic Calculus: what should I do with my $50 7 If I donate the money to a children’s charity: • I will receive pleasure of 3 intensity for 50 hours. The probably of this is high – 80%. • The impact on me: 3 x 50 x .8 = 120 hedons • 50 Starving children will be cared for, each receiving a pleasure of 9 intensity for 100 hours. The probability for this is very high – 90%. • The impact on her: 50 x 9 x .9 = 405 hedons TOTAL IMPACT: 525 hedons
  • 8. The Hedonic Calculus: what should I do with my $50 8 1. If I buy myself Black Ops II, the world will be improved by 160.5 hedons 2. If I donate the money to a children’s charity the world will be improved by 525 hedons 3. I should do whatever will bring about the greatest pleasure in the world 4. I should donate the money to the charity
  • 9. An important distinction 9 What is the right action for you to do? The action that a good person would do?  The subjectively right act – the act you believe will maximize utility.  The objectively right act – the act that will actually maximize utility  The epistemically right act – the act that you are rationally warranted to perform.
  • 10. How do we regard different types of pleasures? 10  What counts as pleasure?  What about sadistic and masochistic pleasures?  Bentham: the source of pleasure doesn’t matter  Are there higher and lower pleasures?  Bentham: It’s a subjective criterion – “Pushpin is as good as poetry”  J.S. Mill: There is an objective quality to different pleasures that should also be factor into our calculations Quality comes from what people would choose if they had access to all possible pleasures
  • 11. Are all goods commensurable? 11 Can all pleasures be roughly compared? Can they be reduced to some sort of homogenous value?
  • 12. Intellectual skill development: Objection by counter-example 12  An objection shows that there’s something wrong with the theory or with one the assumptions that supports that theory.  A counter-example is a specific case to which the theory gives the wrong answer according to our ordinary intuitions
  • 13. Counter-examples and 13 Utilitarianism Assumptions made by Bentham’s Act Utilitarianism: ① The right action is the one that maximizes the total balanced of pleasure in the world ② The source of pleasure doesn't matter ③ Each person is to count for one, and none for more than one ④ Tradeoffs of cost to some for gains to others are acceptable ⑤ Values are homogenous
  • 14. Criticisms of Utilitarianism 14  It’s too difficult to apply  People care about more than just pleasure  We can not reduce all human goods into quantifiable units which can be aggregated and compared  There is no non-arbitrary limit to how far into the future we should consider consequences  Intention is important for determining the moral status of actions, but no room for this in utilitarianism  Justifies acts that seem to be plainly wrong like murder and rape
  • 15. Other forms of Utilitarianism 15  Rule Utilitarianism - Always act according to the rule that would produce the most utility in the world (vs. “act” utilitarianism)  Preference Utilitarianism: Always act so as to maximize satisfaction of people’s preferences (vs. “Hedonistic” Utilitarianism)
  • 16. Mill’s personal relationship to Bentham  Son of Bentham’s best friend  Raised to be the perfect Utilitarian  Prodigy – Oxford by 12  Became an amazing Utilitarian thinking machine completely committed to the cause  Had a complete mental breakdown by the time he was 21 followed by disabling clinical depression  This caused him to rethink the basic assumptions of Utilitarianism
  • 17. Mill’s central correction to Utilitarianism o Pleasures differ in quality as well as in quantity “The Decided Preference Criterion”: o Humans prefer the higher pleasures – those activities that “Of two pleasures … if one of the engage their higher faculties two is, by those who are competently acquainted with o Higher pleasures are always going to both, placed so far above the other trump lower pleasures – have an than they prefer it… and would not infinite value by comparison. resign it for any quality of the other pleasure … we are justified in o Hedonic calculus can’t help us ascribing to it a superiority in decide what is right anymore – we quality…” need something else - Utilitarianism, Ch. II
  • 18. We want happiness not  contentment one would be There are things almost no willing to trade for no amount of something else  Therefore, The most satisfactory life for anyone will contain a mix of higher and lower pleasures  "it is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied”  “it is better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied”  This is true as a matter of empirical fact – its what people want out of life. We want to be proud of our lives. We want to live with human
  • 19. A good enough life? o A life with few and transitory pains o A life with many and various pleasures o A life that is more active than passive o A life lived with a realistic expectation of one’s prospects
  • 20. What sort of life is a good (enough) life?  There are as many different kinds of good lives as there are individual persons:  Different mixes of excitement and tranquility  Different combinations of higher and lower pleasures  Unique individuals require unique recipes for happiness
  • 21. Differences between Bentham and Mill Mill’s Utilitarian principle: Actions are right in proportion to their tendency to increase the greatest happiness for the greatest number. Bentham’s Utilitarianism Mill’s “Utilitarianism” (?)  Hedonistic  Non-hedonistic  Pleasures vary in quality  Pleasures are homogeneous  Non-maximizing. Aims for a threshhold of happiness  Maximizing  Sensitive to distribution  Indifferent to distribution
  • 22. Williams’s “Integrity objection” against Utilitarianism 22 Jim is a botanist doing research in a South American country led by a brutal dictator. One day he finds himself in the central square of a small town facing 20 Indians who have been randomly captured and tied up as an example of what will happen to rebels. The army captain tells Jim that if he agrees to kill one of the Indians, the others will be released in honor of Jim’s status as a guest. If, however, Jim refuses, then all the Indians will be shot. What should Jim do?
  • 23. Williams’s “Integrity objection” against Utilitarianism 23  There’s a crucial moral distinction between what happens and what I do  Without this distinction we can not understanding what it means to have integrity  Moral integrity requires the individual to view himself as a moral agent whose actions flow “from projects or attitudes which in some cases he takes seriously at the deepest level, as what his life is about”  Utilitarianism can’t understand this notion of moral integrity, because it leaves no room for describing the ethical importance of the relationship between our projects, identity, and actions.