Transcript Document

Egoism
Psychological & Ethical Egoism
Ought implies can: In order for you to have a
moral obligation to do something, it has to
be possible for you to do it.
Psych egoism + “ought implies can” = ethical
egoism (or Social Contract Theory) as the
only possible absolutist moral theory
Egoism
Calvinism
• Accepts psych egoism
• Rejects ethical egoism (accepts Divine Command
Theory)
Calvinism can only do the above by rejecting “ought
implies can”
You have a moral obligation to obey God’s
command even though your selfish “sin nature”
(inherited from Adam) makes it impossible.
Utilitarianism
Nozick’s Experience
Machine
The fact that most people
wouldn’t hook
themselves up shows
they value something
other than pleasurable
experiences.
Utilitarianism
When calculating how much pleasure an
action will produce, one should consider
• Intensity
• Duration
• Fecundity (capacity for “growing” more
pleasures)
Consequences must be calculated for
everyone, not just oneself.
Utilitarianism
John Stuart Mill (18061873)
Developed Utilitarianism
into a popular system
His name, not Bentham’s
is synonymous with
Utilitarianism today
Utilitarianism
Objection: Utilitarianism is a crass, hedonistic
philosophy
Mill’s reply: Some pleasure are qualitatively
better than other (quality vs. quantity)
Utilitarianism
Mill’s defense: “It is better to be a human
being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied; better
to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool
satisfied.”
Not all pleasures are created equally.
We know some pleasure are better than others
because people familiar with both prefer
higher pleasures.
Utilitarianism
Higher pleasures
• Intellectual
• Cultural
Lower pleasures
• Physical/bodily
• Common, “blue-collar” pleasures of the
uneducated masses
Utilitarianism
Some pleasures are qualitatively better than
others.
Bentham’s system treated all pleasures alike
in kind, only differing in quantity.
Utilitarianism
Objections
• Mill is smuggling in other values under the
guise of higher quality
– pleasure + knowledge
– aesthetic (artistic) value
• Mill is universalizing the values of the
bourgeois elite (classist, ethnocentric)
Utilitarianism
Mill: Educating the masses will allow them to
experience higher pleasures also.
Objection: What you find pleasurable is
purely a matter of conditioning
Reply: Man’s nature will gravitate towards
learning, art and culture if afforded the
opportunity
Utilitarianism: Objections
Too permissive
• Utilitarian response: (1) bite the bullet (2)
try to show negative side-effects, long-term
consequences
• Rebuttal of the anti-utilitarian: The
Publicity Requirement
• Rejoinder: Just don’t get caught
Too demanding
Utilitarianism: Objections
Impractical - calculating takes too long or is too
complicated to be practical
Turns people into unfeeling calculating machines
beholden to the results of hedonistic calculus
Godless doctrine
“Dirty Hands” objection: Requires one to
compromise one’s principles and integrity for the
greater good
Utilitarianism
Thought experiments:
• The Fat Man
• The Drifter Hanged
• The Unwilling Organ Donor
• Torturing the Terrorist
• The Drowning Child
• The Bioweapons job
• The Corrupt General and the Coerced Executioner
Utilitarianism
• 42-43 Definition
• Pleasure of intellect, feeling, imagination,
moral sentiment always valued over
physical sensations by hedonists
• 43 Objection: Doctrine worthy of swine
Utilitarianism
• 50 There is nothing good in sacrifice itself,
but only for the happiness it produces.
• 51 Utilitarianism is too demanding
• 52 Utilitarianism makes people into
unfeeling utility-calculating machines
Utilitarianism
• 45 L It’s easier for someone with limited (mental?)
capacities to satisfy her desires.
• Pigs and fools are easily satisfied, but that doesn’t
make their lot superior to human beings or
Socrates.
• 46 R Greatest Happiness Principle: Happiness
includes quality and quantity (higher as well as
lower pleasures)
Utilitarianism
• 53 R Utilitarianism is “a godless doctrine”
• 54 R No time to caluclate the consequences
• 56 L Too easy to create biased results with
calculations
Utilitarianism
Notes on the Mill’s text
• p. 42 L Epicurus: Ancient Greek Hedonist
Philosopher--also misinterpreted, followers
called swine
• Utility not meant in the common sense of
“useful” or “pratcial” as distinct from
pleasurable
Utilitarianism
Peter Singer
Does world poverty make Utilitarianism into a
demanding philosophy after all?
It is demanding, but that’s no objection, just
shows we’re selfish.
Examples
• Bob’s Bugatti
• Dora’s TV Set