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Comparing Mill's And Utilitarian View

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Sometimes in life you are faced with a decision that no matter what you do the desired outcome will not be what you would personally desire to happen. In the moral dilemma of the young man that has been conscripted by his government to fight a war, while at the same time leave his mother back at home with a terminal illness, there is no simple right answer. This delimit was proposed by Jean-Paul Sarte. On one level this dilemma could be addressed by Mill’s and a Utilitarian view, if the young man goes to serve his country he would be serving the greater good and happiness of all, possibly helping many more people than if he stayed and took care of his ailing mother. Under these teachings even though it would not make the soldier happy to leave his mother in a time of need, the idea of serving and making the most people happy as possible, would serve the greatest good. When you look at this dilemma from a Kantian viewpoint, he has a much different view on what makes something moral or have value. Kant does not place happiness as a need for an action to have worth, instead he bases if an action has moral worth on what your intentions were, not if it caused you pain or happiness. In the case of the soldier, if he went to war …show more content…

Under the Utilitarian argument, if the young man went to fight and it helped the greater good than it would be a moral choice. If you look at this from a Kantian standpoint, the same decision would not be moral and carry any worth if he had false intentions to why he was fighting. I do not think that either of these positions are the best way to deal with this dilemma, at least if you looked at it from a Kant style perspective, if the young man stayed home and helped his mother he would be able to live with his decision. If he decided to go to war he would be guilty that he had not been there in his mom’s time of

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