Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Jeremy Bentham's Hedonistic
Utilitarianism
- Ultimate goal for Bentham
- The goal of all actions is gaining pleasure
- Avoiding pain
- Idea of psychological hedonism
- Psychological hedonsim
- Individuals pursue pain and avoid pleasure
- 'under the governance of two soverign
masters, pleasure and pain'
- Utility calculus
- Moral value of an act can be
calculated by considering the
consequences.
- Pleasure + pleasure (- Pain) = moral worth
- Mugging example - Elderly woman is
mugged, elderly woman is afflicted with
lots of pain but the mugger gains pleasure.
Arguably the womans pain outweighs the
muggers pleasure so there is very little
moral worth.
- Utility calculus can be
remembered with the
acronym: PRRICED
- Purity,
richness,
remoteness,
intensity,
certainty,
extent,
duration
- Criticisms
- Rule utilitarians argue that the theory is impractical
- Long term consequences can't be known
- Too time consuming to calculate moral worth
- Leads to counter intuitive results
- Organ harvesting example - if a doctor murders one
person who could be saved, but donates all the
organs to five people who are saved by the organs
stolen from the person who was murdered,
arguably there is more pleasure to the five people
saved. Gives moral worth to that unlawful murder.