Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 1 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation uComments z1. Locating Mill’s concept of liberty David Miller’s proposal:

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Presentation transcript:

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 1 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation uComments z1. Locating Mill’s concept of liberty David Miller’s proposal: there are 3 traditions of liberty –(1) The republican –(2) The liberal –(3) The Idealist Where is Mill’s theory?

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 2 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation uComments z2. On Liberty remains immensely influential to this day. When the Wolfenden Committee in England recommended that laws against homosexual behavior be changed, they appealed to Mill’s argument: “There must remain a realm of private morality and immorality which... is not the law’s business.”

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 3 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation Debates over legality & morality of pornography. Has almost become part of popular culture--if speech or action does not harm others, should not be legally proscribed and, many would say, should not be regarded as immoral.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 4 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation  3. Alan Ryan observes that the book is about more than a principle of liberty. It is about a certain way of life. Mill is making a plea for a way of life which gives full play to imagination, spontaneity (“experiments in living”), diversity, variety, individuality vs routine, security, & community.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 5 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation uProblems with Mill’s principle and justification of it z1. The difficulty of making the distinction between self-regarding and other-regarding examples

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 6 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation Lord Devlin in his famous The Enforcement of Morals argues that the distinction does not hold. All actions are in some way other- regarding. z2. Does freedom of expression always enhance truth? A distinction is necessary.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 7 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation Civil discourse which has as its goal truth vs polemical discourse which has as its goal winning the argument. z3. Does Mill emphasize individualism at the expense of the values of community?

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 8 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation z4. A case study: Dyzenhaus on Mill & pornography Feminists argue that pornography should be legally proscribed because it causes harm to women. Those opposed to legal restrictions on pornography appeal to Millian arguments.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 9 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation –Pornography does not cause physical harm to women. –Pornography is purely self- regarding. Dyzenhaus’ thesis: Mill, on the basis of his own principle, would call for legal restrictions on pornography.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 10 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation –Mill in On the Subjection of Women call for perfect equality between men and women. –For Mill, the inequality of women prevents women from achieving their autonomy, which in turn is a necessary condition of happiness

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 11 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation –To those who object that men & women are naturally unequal, Mill would respond that what we take as natural is in fact the construct of a society of inequality (39). –Is this consistent with On Liberty? äDyzenhaus: Yes.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 12 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation äIn the opening lines of On Liberty, Mill talks about the limits of power exercised by society, not only the government, over the individual. äHe is concerned not only with government tyranny but also with social tyranny.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 13 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation äIndeed, he describes that latter as often “more formidable than many kinds of political oppression, since... it leaves fewer means of escape, penetrating much more deeply into the details of life, and enslaving the soul itself” (Gray 8-9).

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 14 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation äMill is concerned with the coercive power of social classes and groups, not only the coercive power of the government (41). äThis suggests that the power exercised by men over women through pornography is one of these kinds of social and moral coercion (42).

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 15 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation –Cf. Dyzenhaus’ Millian defense of the legal restrictions on pornography with the conservative defense. äConservatives wish to censor pornography because it offends against community norms of morality. äAnd conservatives usually want to preserve patriarchy.

Mill's On Liberty - critical evaluation - 16 Mill’s On Liberty ~ critical evaluation äMill would (acc. to Dyzenhaus) reject the conservative position because it retains patriarchy and thus does not allow women to achieve true autonomy.