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Utilitarianism: John Stuart Mill And On Liberty

Decent Essays

Question 2) In Utilitarianism, the utilitarian principle is defended as the foundation of morality compared to the civil and social liberty emphasized in On Liberty in the form of society’s power over an individual (Mill, 1). In this paper, I argue that Mill’s Utilitarianism cannot be reconciled with On Liberty on the basis of contradicting principles in both books and the visible tensions between the defense of individual liberty and the promotion of the utility principle. In fact, the contradiction lies in the notion of the greatest happiness principle versus individual rights.
To begin with, although Mill states in On Liberty that he considers “utility as the ultimate appeal on all ethical questions”, the rest of the book contradicts his writings on Utilitarianism (Mill, 15). First, in Utilitarianism Mill emphasizes the principle of utility, also known as the greatest happiness principle (Mill, 133-134). In other words, the desired actions are ones which ensure the greatest happiness for the most people possible. However, this greatest happiness principle could, also, according to Mill, be considered as an evil that “requires society to be on its guard” (Mill, 8). In chapter one of On Liberty, Mill warms about the “tyranny of the majority”, therefore; the contradiction lies in the fact that what makes the most people happy is considered right (Mill, 8). In some cases, the view of the majority can be harmful and according to that, an individual view can be silenced and the greatest happiness principle will enforce the tyranny of the majority. More importantly, when examining the liberty of thought and discussion in chapter two of On Liberty, using the example of silencing mankind and silencing one man, Mill makes it clear that individual liberty and rights, as long as no harm is being committed on others, are more important than making the greatest number of people happy as he says: “if the opinion is right… produced by its collision with error” (Mill, 21).
Second, the tension between individual choice and the utility principle is another factor for not being able to reconcile both books. In chapter three of On Liberty, Mill states that “the human faculties of perception… are exercised only in making a

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