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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
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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.
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Utilitarianism Nozick’s Experience Machine The fact that most people wouldn’t hook themselves up shows they value something other than pleasurable experiences.
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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.
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Utilitarianism John Stuart Mill (1806- 1873) Developed Utilitarianism into a popular system His name, not Bentham’s is synonymous with Utilitarianism today
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Utilitarianism Objection: Utilitarianism is a crass, hedonistic philosophy Mill’s reply: Some pleasure are qualitatively better than other (quality vs. quantity)
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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.
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Utilitarianism Higher pleasures Intellectual Cultural Lower pleasures Physical/bodily Common, “blue-collar” pleasures of the uneducated masses
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Utilitarianism Some pleasures are qualitatively better than others. Bentham’s system treated all pleasures alike in kind, only differing in quantity.
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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)
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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
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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
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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
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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
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Utilitarianism 42-43 Definition Pleasure of intellect, feeling, imagination, moral sentiment always valued over physical sensations by hedonists 43 Objection: Doctrine worthy of swine
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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
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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)
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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
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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
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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
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