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John Stuart Mill Utilitarianism

Decent Essays

Mohammed Zain
PHI 105
5/27/2016
The concept of utilitarianism according to John Stuart Mill
Utilitarianism is an ethnic concept, according to which the morality of a certain action is defined by the utility, which it brings. John Stuart Mill provides a clear explanation of the main ideas of utilitarianism, their possible misunderstandings, and the idea of higher moral obligation according to justice and its connection to utilitarianism. This investigation will lead to a personal assessment of utilitarianism and discovering of possible problems, to which it can lead.
First of all, Mill explains various misconceptions about utilitarianism. He mentions that many people believe that utilitarianism implies aspiration towards utility as counterweight …show more content…

Thus, the action can be considered as moral when it increases the level of utility in the whole world. If one person will try to increase a level of personal happiness at the expense of the general social happiness, such action cannot be considered as a moral one. At the same time, utilitarianism does not mean that each person must act only at the name of the greatest good. It is not connected to the motives that implied by the actions. Instead, the morality of a certain action depends from the goodness it brings as a result. Consequently, according to Mill, from the perspective of morality the action can be defined as good one if it leads to pleasure or in another words to happiness, but does not prevent to the social …show more content…

First, the author tries to explain the concept of justice. He states that from the point of most people, justice implies punishment of people for criminal acts and that this punishment must be performed even if it contradicts to the law. Mill says that moral obligation comes from the idea of duty and the idea that a certain person has the right to do certain action. Thereby, the idea of deserving or not deserving punishment is the key one in moral thinking. According to Mill, it is possible to distinguish justice from other morality’s forms by considering which obligation are perfect and which are imperfect. Perfect obligation is one that any person may require from another, while imperfect is one that nobody can demand from another person. Justice totally fits the idea of perfect, or in another words, higher obligation as it implies the rights of any person. Thus, in case a person made some wrong action, he or she has its own moral right to

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