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John Stuart Mill And Jeremy Bentham

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One would be right in assuming that we would not do something in life unless it has something to offer us. There is no point to complete an action unless the action’s consequence benefitted us in some way. Furthermore, there a notion that in life we must aspire to do more than just what we like, understanding that living life is taking the bad with the good. However, for hedonists this notion is non-existent. Hedonism is the pursuit of pleasure while simultaneously avoiding pain, deriving happiness only from pleasure achieved and pain avoided. John Stuart Mill and Jeremy Bentham are two philosophers who fall into the Utilitarian and hedonist camp. However, while both men are Utilitarian, they differ greatly in their thoughts on hedonism. Where Bentham takes a quantitative stance, Mill assumes the, admittedly more complicated, quantitative position. In Mill doing so, he distinguishes between two types of pleasure: higher pleasures and lower pleasures. In this paper, I plan to prove that Mill’s view is not philosophically defensible. I will do so by showing that Mill ventures from Hedonism as he takes a more objective stance that is not based on pleasure alone. Before we can begin to disagree with Mill, we must frame his qualitative hedonism against Bentham’s quantitative hedonism. Bentham defines utility as something that produces “benefit, advantage, pleasure, good, of happiness” (353). This basic principle can also be applied to his definition of hedonism. Bentham’s

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