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John Stuart Mill Limitations

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Freedom of speech has been a controversial topic for many years. It has not been controversial in the sense of whether or not countries should have it, but whether or not there should be certain limitations on free speech. John Stuart Mill believes that the Harm Principle should be the only limitation on free speech. Raphael Cohen-Almagor believes that there should be an extension of the Harm Principle called the Offence Principle. The problem is finding the limitation between the two of the different principles. I believe that the Offence Principle is a necessary extension of the Harm Principle, but there needs to be a line between what is considered offensive and what is not.
John Stuart Mill was an English philosopher who wrote On Liberty. In On Liberty, Mill discusses the importance and the limitations that should be set on free speech. Mill is more tolerant of free speech and language rights, but he also believes that there should be limitations on free speech so there is regulation on the actions of people under free speech (Mill John Stuart, 1975).
Mill stated in On Liberty, “But the peculiar evil of silencing the expression of an opinion is that it is robbing the human race; as well as the existing generation; those who dissent from the opinion, still more than those …show more content…

Feinberg believed that an Offence Principle should be established as an extension of the Harm Principle that Mills argued. Mills Harm Principle only covered physical harm, but not psychological harm (Cohen-Almagor R, 1993). That is why Feinberg believed there should be an extension of the Harm Principle. The Offence Principle would not only cover physical harm, but psychological harm as well. He also believes that offense is a less serious thing than harm, and that it is not taken into consideration that psychological harm could lead to physical harm or serious implications (Cohen-Almagor R,

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