Better the illusions that exalt us ......

@Robin. I am not trying to be difficult. I am trying to understand. So here goes with my understanding of the system
Hmmm, you should probably take SEP with a grain of salt. As I always point out they will have us believe that Mach and Carnap were Neutral Monists!

And when stating how Materialists define matter they use Berkeley as a source.
This seems to say that utilitarianism, as conceived by Bentham and his cohort, was an attempt to make the assessment of morality a matter of objective effect on human happiness, and that this must be impartial. To that extent everyone's happiness matters, but it matters equally. this is clear in Bentham's work because he maintains that we are governed only by pleasure and pain. Your suggestion that the pleasure of the other is as important in determining the moral course does not seem to be supported here because:
Well let me stop you there and quote from J.S. Mill's Utilitarianism:
I must again repeat, what the assailants of utilitarianism seldom have the justice to acknowledge, that the happiness which forms the utilitarian standard of what is right in conduct, is not the agent's own happiness, but that of all concerned. As between his own happiness and that of others, utilitarianism requires him to be as strictly impartial as a disinterested and benevolent spectator.

J.S Mill Utilitarianism
So it is not my suggestion, it is J.S Mill's suggestion. So it is supported.

Your source cites Bentham's Principles Of Morals and Legislation and what Bentham is doing here is simply setting out some definitions about the different type of utility, in this case the "sympathetic sensibility", the degree to which a person gains pleasure from another's pleasure and pain from another's pain and he balances this with the "antipathetic sensibility", the degree to which a person gains pain from another's pleasure and pleasure from another's pain. I don't think that it is controversial that we all have each of these to some extent - your source is drawing a somewhat long bow in this case.
Bentham then explains that the happiness which matters is that of the community (the group or aggregate, as I have been calling it)
Bentham calls the community a "fictitious body":
The interest of the community then is, what is it?— the sum of the interests of the several members who compose it

Jeremy Bentham - Principles of Morals and Legislation
And this leads to a problem. If each individual can only pursue his own happiness it is difficult to see how he can simultaneously pursue the happiness of the community.
That would only be difficult if the thing that made me happy also made the community unhappy. If the community is indifferent about or happy about the things that make me happy then what is the problem?

If the things that make me happy make the community unhappy then there is a conflict, but not a particularly difficult conflict.

In the end there is communication, compromise and if that fails the law. It is this last part that Bentham mostly addresses.
These will be at odds at least some of the time. Bentham and Mill seem to try to reconcile this by a version of "enlightened self interest" But how can we make a person who is only able to pursue his own happiness take your view that another's happiness is equally important.
I don't think that either Bentham or Mill say that a person is only able to pursue their own happiness. I don't think that is true of human nature, and in the cases where it is, well it is not really a practical consideration in any case - unless we go and live as hermits then out happiness is dependent upon the happiness of others.
Bentham specifically denies that.
Please quote where Bentham specifically denies that another's happiness is equally important.
So this is part of the problem I have in understanding what you are arguing for. It truly is not self evident, though you are probably more steeped in this and have perhaps forgotten the tensions one meets when coming to this at first.
It might be easier for you if you dealt with what they actually say, rather than an interpretation of someone else's interpretation of what they say.
So although the actual experience of pleasure or utility is subjective there needs to be some way of measuring this objectively, else there is no guide to action apart from the individual decision. I cannot see how you can get to that without agreeing some normative measure.
Economists have no trouble incorporating utility into objective models while acknowledging that it cannot have a normative measure, so why shouldn't Ethicists?
Turning to Mill: he appears to move away from Bentham because although he says that happiness is the only thing that is desirable in itself: it is not the only thing that a human being can desire. It is not clear whether he thinks those other desires derive as a part of each person's happiness: but if he does not it is hard to see how this aligns with Bentham's conception that we are motivated by the pursuit of our own self interest. So he has moved away from the individual decision about where his own happiness lies to a conception of the happiness of the group. Which again seems to me to be necessarily normative. And this is why I cannot see how you can be basing on both Bentham and Mill, since I cannot see how they agree.
As I pointed out above, the idea that Bentham endorsed psychological egoism is simply claim by the SEP writer and not supported, as far as I can see, by anything Bentham wrote himself.
Mill appears to endorse an objective standpoint in his defense of the intrinsic superiority of the "higher pleasures". This seems to me to be a radical departure from the position of Bentham, because for Bentham pleasure is the only thing with intrinsic value, and the existence and the measure of that value is entirely subjective. Indeed poetry is inferior to a seduko, because the seduko can produce pleasure for more people. Mills talks about the superiority of art based on the sense of human dignity of the competent judge. This means that the value is independent of the pleasure, since those pursuits will be preferred even when they produce less pleasure in the competent judge. Thus the idea that pleasure is itself the indicator of moral worth is not supported here. It may not be an objective thing, but this seems implicit in the notion of the intrinsic superiority of certain kinds of pursuit, surely?
No, Mill is only pointing out that the human race is rather better than the detractors of Utilitarianism would have us believe, he does not state (anywhere that I can see) any intrinsic superiority for the higher pleasures, only that humans do take pleasure in certain things that animals do not. And he does not insist on it as a precondition for Utiltarianism.
Once again I cannot reconcile this with the idea of a subjective system. So we have to look at what Mill means by happiness. It is clear he does not mean what Bentham means is it not? Bentham means what we usually mean by happiness - a sensation or mental state. Mill does not seem to mean that. Rather he appears to be talking about the exercise of higher mental capacities which we do not share with animals or children. It is as if he defines happiness as "right living" and again I cannot see how that squares with subjectivity since it rests on a conception of man's nature and not on individual difference.
You have lost me completely here. How can happiness not be subjective. How can it not be a sensation of a mental state. Where does Mill ever suggest that happiness is not a sensation or mental state?
So what should we do? Mill conceives utilitarianism as an ethical system which informs us of our duty as much as any other. He asserts “the doctrine that utility or happiness is the criterion of right and wrong” Thus it provides a standard of action rather than a decision making procedure. That is it tells us what our goal is but not how we should reach it.
What would you have him do, produce a manual for behaviour? I think J.S. Mill is crediting us with a little intelligence of our own. After all Kant does not provide a decision making procedure. In fact I can't think of any Ethicist who has attempted this beside Bentham, and he was addressing judicial procedures rather than procedures for individuals.
He then suggests we should reach it by adopting secondary principles where those principles generally produce more happiness AND where we cannot tell in advance that following the principle will produce less happiness than some other decision.
You will have to cite this part because I have no idea what you are talking about.
But this does not really explain his ideas about right and wrong when he seems to say that an action is only wrong if we think it should be punished.
Please cite the part where he seems to say this, otherwise I am in not position to comment.
So these are some of the reasons I am having a bit of trouble to tell what it is you are arguing when you say you found on both Bentham and Mill.
The reasons you are having trouble is that you are not reading Bentham and Mill. You are reading other people writing about Bentham and Mill.

What would really help is if you could state rather more concisely what your difficulty is with this rather straightforward position, because I don't really understand what you don't understand.
 
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If it matters, I have thus far not been discussing this type of "commonly understood" utilitarianism. To me "utilitarianism" is simply a morality based only on utility -- the extra conditions mentioned above are unimportant and only serve to obscure the point, in my opinion.
You are right. I imagine that was the intention.
 
No, because it doesn't.

It does appear to do pretty well, however, in societies of intelligent individuals. Economics shows this pretty clearly.
Yes, as Adam Smith pointed out two centuries ago. And as we have found out last century, treating others as a means to an end turns out to be a rather better method of maximising happiness than treating them as a means in themselves.

And the rest we can have governments and laws to adjust where it does not work.
 
Hmmm, you should probably take SEP with a grain of salt. As I always point out they will have us believe that Mach and Carnap were Neutral Monists!

And when stating how Materialists define matter they use Berkeley as a source.

Certainly any text which is not the original is subject to the interpretation of the person writing it. But that is not all I read. The understanding I have at present is based on what these sources seem to agree on. I do not think that is illegitmate.

Well let me stop you there and quote from J.S. Mill's Utilitarianism:

So it is not my suggestion, it is J.S Mill's suggestion. So it is supported.

I am sorry. I thought it was clear from what I said that is not supported by Bentham. I referred to him and his cohort because I understood that Mill followed and built on Bentham and James Mill amongst others. It is true that in one of the succeeding paragraphs I referred to them both but I did think that it would be obvious I was trying to outline my understanding of Bentham, because later I said "Turning to Mill". Mill did disagree with Bentham, did he not?

Your source cites Bentham's Principles Of Morals and Legislation and what Bentham is doing here is simply setting out some definitions about the different type of utility, in this case the "sympathetic sensibility", the degree to which a person gains pleasure from another's pleasure and pain from another's pain and he balances this with the "antipathetic sensibility", the degree to which a person gains pain from another's pleasure and pleasure from another's pain. I don't think that it is controversial that we all have each of these to some extent - your source is drawing a somewhat long bow in this case.

Why do you think this is a long bow? The writer of this quote takes the view that Bentham's reason for suggesting that another's pleasure or pain should matter to us consists entirely in the fact that it gives rise to pleasure or pain in ourselves. Bentham said "Nature has placed mankind under the governance of two sovereign masters, pain and pleasure." He seems to locate this within the individual (indeed it is hard to see where else it could be). So any person who does not find that another's pleasure makes him happy or another's pain makes him sad will have no reason to take account of any but his own. Such people do exist in the form of psychopaths and sociopaths; and nearer the mean there are many who do not seem to have much of the capacity.

I think this is what Mill meant when he said that Bentham was too narrow.


Bentham calls the community a "fictitious body":

Yes, he does. He said that the interest of the community could not be anything beyond "the sum of the interests of the several members who compose it".
But he also said: "An action then may be said to be conformable to the principle of utility, or, for shortness sake, to utility, (meaning with respect to the community at large) when the tendency it has to augment the happiness of the community is greater than any it has to diminish it."

And "A man may be said to be a partizan of the principle of utility, when the approbation or disapprobation he annexes to any action, or to any measure, is determined by and proportioned to the tendency which he conceives it to have to augment or to diminish the happiness of the community: or in other words, to its conformity or unconformity to the laws or dictates of utility."

And "A measure of government (which is but a particular kind of action, performed by a particular person or persons) may be said to be conformable to or dictated by the principle of utility, when in like manner the tendency which it has to augment the happiness of the community is greater than any which it has to diminish it."

So far as I can tell Bentham does not seem to see this as a problem because he seems to assume that the interests of the individual will coincide with the interests of society, so that proper pursuit of each individual's pleasure will necessarily increase the happiness of all. I do not think I can accept this. If a measure of government is an action performed by a person or persons then it must be performed to increase his own happiness. It is not in the least bit obvious to me that those actions will necessarily have the effect of increasing the happiness of the governed. As I see it, it supposes that there are no real differences between people or their interests. I think there are such differences.

That would only be difficult if the thing that made me happy also made the community unhappy. If the community is indifferent about or happy about the things that make me happy then what is the problem?

If the things that make me happy make the community unhappy then there is a conflict, but not a particularly difficult conflict.

In the end there is communication, compromise and if that fails the law. It is this last part that Bentham mostly addresses.

That only works if the community has an independent existence. If those with power or wealth conceive their interest in such a way as to make a lot of people unhappy that is neither here nor there if the community is "fictitious", and any action which increases that individual's happiness is moral by definition. There is absolutely no reason why he should not do just what he likes (indeed he "ought" to): and if he needs to lie about it to keep you quiet then he "ought" to do that as well. As Bentham says "Of an action that is conformable to the principle of utility one may always say either that it is one that ought to be done, or at least that it is not one that ought not to be done. One may say also, that it is right it should be done; at least that it is not wrong it should be done: that it is a right action; at least that it is not a wrong action. When thus interpreted, the words ought, and right and wrong and others of that stamp, have a meaning: when otherwise, they have none".

I don't think that either Bentham or Mill say that a person is only able to pursue their own happiness.

I think that is precisely what Bentham says. Can you show me where he denies it? There is some scope for ambiguity because in the phrase "fictitious body" the emphasis is on body, and it may be argued that he means something like the phrase "corporate person" But that does not help us since it is not possible for any such virtual entity to act, whether it has interests or no. Only people can act. And they follow their own interest by definition and, indeed, any other possible kind of action is denied by a sort of circular reasoning such as we see in Freud in another context. I agree it is not what Mill says.

I don't think that is true of human nature,

I agree.

and in the cases where it is, well it is not really a practical consideration in any case - unless we go and live as hermits then out happiness is dependent upon the happiness of others.

I agree

Please quote where Bentham specifically denies that another's happiness is equally important.

He denies it in his description of the "sympathetic sensibility". If he has another passage where he admits the possibility I will be glad to see it.

Economists have no trouble incorporating utility into objective models while acknowledging that it cannot have a normative measure, so why shouldn't Ethicists?

Don't understand that. I usually contrast objective/subjective and normative/descriptive, so I think my thought was improperly conveyed. Bentham says that happiness is subjective. He propose his calculus as a means of making it objective, I think. It is in practice impossible to apply that calculus (perhaps you disagree, but I think it is). So we have to move to a rule based system based on what generally works, for most decisions we actually face. That is normative is it not?

As I pointed out above, the idea that Bentham endorsed psychological egoism is simply claim by the SEP writer and not supported, as far as I can see, by anything Bentham wrote himself.

I disagree, as outlined above. There is clearly scope for different interpretations since you differ from SEP and the internet encyclopaedia of philosophy. But if the pursuit of happiness is subjective and is the only moral thing then how do you distinguish it from psychological egoism?

No, Mill is only pointing out that the human race is rather better than the detractors of Utilitarianism would have us believe, he does not state (anywhere that I can see) any intrinsic superiority for the higher pleasures, only that humans do take pleasure in certain things that animals do not. And he does not insist on it as a precondition for Utiltarianism.

I assume you base on this? "better Socrates dissatisfied than a pig satisfied."

But he goes on " If I am asked, what I mean by difference of quality in pleasures, or what makes one pleasure more valuable than another, merely as a pleasure, except its being greater in amount, there is but one possible answer. Of two pleasures, if there be one to which all or almost all who have experience of both give a decided preference, irrespective of any feeling of moral obligation to prefer it, that is the more desirable pleasure. If one of the two is, by those who are competently acquainted with both, placed so far above the other that they prefer it, even though knowing it to be attended with a greater amount of discontent, and would not resign it for any quantity of the other pleasure which their nature is capable of, we are justified in ascribing to the preferred enjoyment a superiority in quality, so far outweighing quantity as to render it, in comparison, of small account."

And "its most appropriate appellation is a sense of dignity, which all human beings possess in one form or other, and in some, though by no means in exact, proportion to their higher faculties, and which is so essential a part of the happiness of those in whom it is strong, that nothing which conflicts with it could be, otherwise than momentarily, an object of desire to them."

But you are right he does not insist on it as a precondition for utilitarianism: he does say it is necessary for a "perfectly just conception of utility or happiness"

You have lost me completely here. How can happiness not be subjective. How can it not be a sensation of a mental state. Where does Mill ever suggest that happiness is not a sensation or mental state?

In the same passage.

"standard is not the agent's own greatest happiness, but the greatest amount of happiness altogether; and if it may possibly be doubted whether a noble character is always the happier for its nobleness, there can be no doubt that it makes other people happier, and that the world in general is immensely a gainer by it. Utilitarianism, therefore, could only attain its end by the general cultivation of nobleness of character, even if each individual were only benefited by the nobleness of others, and his own, so far as happiness is concerned, were a sheer deduction from the benefit. But the bare enunciation of such an absurdity as this last, renders refutation superfluous."

Clearly in the last sentence he does not think that is a likely outcome. But later he says this: " Though it is only in a very imperfect state of the world's arrangements that any one can best serve the happiness of others by the absolute sacrifice of his own, yet so long as the world is in that imperfect state, I fully acknowledge that the readiness to make such a sacrifice is the highest virtue which can be found in man." One can argue, as he does (indeed he almost must), that the sacrifice of personal happiness in such circumstances gives the agent the best chance of maximising his utility: but whatever he means by this he cannot mean the subjective state of happiness as it is usually understood.This is because he has already said the agent has made an "absolute sacrifice" of it. Again he may do so in hopes of increasing the total of happiness in the world if his sacrifice makes others happier: but this does seem to be stretching things a bit.

Both Bentham and Mill do found on the idea that the pursuit of pleasure and avoidance of pain are intrinsic to man's nature and that those principles are irreducible, it seems to me. That is not really subjective so much as an objective statement about how we are made. The content of happiness may be subjective but he basis of that pursuit is not.

What would you have him do, produce a manual for behaviour? I think J.S. Mill is crediting us with a little intelligence of our own. After all Kant does not provide a decision making procedure. In fact I can't think of any Ethicist who has attempted this beside Bentham, and he was addressing judicial procedures rather than procedures for individuals.

But Mill does say we should act in accord with secondary principles, does he not? It seems to follow that there will be rules for conduct and although those can be overridden in particular instances where the utility is violated by following them, in general this seems to imply that there are expectations of moral behaviour which we should all follow on the basis of those rules. I cannot see this is anything other than a conception of "moral truth" as much as any other.

I had taken from other sources that he was founding not so much on utilitarianism, as presented by Bentham, but some form of the golden rule. It is gratifying to find I have indeed understood Mill: as he says:

"In the golden rule of Jesus of Nazareth, we read the complete spirit of the ethics of utility. To do as you would be done by, and to love your neighbour as yourself, constitute the ideal perfection of utilitarian morality. As the means of making the nearest approach to this ideal, utility would enjoin, first, that laws and social arrangements should place the happiness, or (as speaking practically it may be called) the interest, of every individual, as nearly as possible in harmony with the interest of the whole; and secondly, that education and opinion, which have so vast a power over human character, should so use that power as to establish in the mind of every individual an indissoluble association between his own happiness and the good of the whole; especially between his own happiness and the practice of such modes of conduct, negative and positive, as regard for the universal happiness prescribes; so that not only he may be unable to conceive the possibility of happiness to himself, consistently with conduct opposed to the general good, but also that a direct impulse to promote the general good may be in every individual one of the habitual motives of action, and the sentiments connected therewith may fill a large and prominent place in every human being's sentient existence. If the, impugners of the utilitarian morality represented it to their own minds in this its, true character, I know not what recommendation possessed by any other morality they could possibly affirm to be wanting to it; what more beautiful or more exalted developments of human nature any other ethical system can be supposed to foster, or what springs of action, not accessible to the utilitarian, such systems rely on for giving effect to their mandates."

I see nothing in this passage more than I see in any reasonable ethical system based on "do as you would be done by" The things which are unique to utilitarianism are not enough to make a system which will work. Thus we need some version of the golden rule to obviate Omelas. I know you say we do not because Mill says we must value each person's happiness as we do our own: but at the same time each person counts for one and only one and so you need the golden rule to avoid the problem of addition leading to the outcome in Omelas. I think this is why Mill brings it in but perhaps you read it differently?


You will have to cite this part because I have no idea what you are talking about.

It is how I read this passage

" It is a strange notion that the acknowledgment of a first principle is inconsistent with the admission of secondary ones. To inform a traveller respecting the place of his. ultimate destination, is not to forbid the use of landmarks and direction-posts on the way. The proposition that happiness is the end and aim of morality, does not mean that no road ought to be laid down to that goal, or that persons going thither should not be advised to take one direction rather than another. Men really ought to leave off talking a kind of nonsense on this subject, which they would neither talk nor listen to on other matters of practical concernment. Nobody argues that the art of navigation is not founded on astronomy, because sailors cannot wait to calculate the Nautical Almanack. Being rational creatures, they go to sea with it ready calculated; and all rational creatures go out upon the sea of life with their minds made up on the common questions of right and wrong, as well as on many of the far more difficult questions of wise and foolish. And this, as long as foresight is a human quality, it is to be presumed they will continue to do. Whatever we adopt as the fundamental principle of morality, we require subordinate principles to apply it by; the impossibility of doing without them, being common to all systems, can afford no argument against any one in particular; but gravely to argue as if no such secondary principles could be had, and as if mankind had remained till now, and always must remain, without drawing any general conclusions from the experience of human life, is as high a pitch, I think, as absurdity has ever reached in philosophical controversy."

Please cite the part where he seems to say this, otherwise I am in not position to comment.

I will have to come back to this as I do not have the energy to find and cite this again right now, sorry


What would really help is if you could state rather more concisely what your difficulty is with this rather straightforward position, because I don't really understand what you don't understand.

Sorry I am not great at concise. I do not know what you mean by a "straightforward position" in this context
 
The problem I see with your formulation is that every one of those people is acting rationally and in pursuit of their own utility. Again the outcome may well be beneficial in the long run but I see no reason to assume that it will.

The problem you have with my "formulation" is that you are still clinging to this absolutist notion that if person makes a moral choice you must respect it -- and that is false. I don't care if these people are acting rationally and in pursuit of their own utility -- if their decisions lower my utility then there will be conflict. How we resolve that conflict will also be a question of utility. They better hope that I don't decide simply wiping them off the face of the earth maximizes my utility. But then, remember what Tiberias said: "That I would rather live among men than kill them is certainly why you are still alive."
 
I did not say that we must respect moral choices, Rocketdodger. It would be strange if I did, because I am not yet convinced that moral choices are subjective. I do believe that if a person makes any kind of choice at all which does no harm I must respect it: and I do believe that I must not steal someone else's choice, whether that choice is right or wrong. I can deprive someone of their choice on some moral/legal/other rationale and the interesting questions for me are the explorations of how and why those decisions should be taken: but I must not steal it if that person is an adult of full capacity.

I saw earlier that you want to use the word moral(ity) where most people would use integrity (you mentioned Ayn Rand would use integrity for that idea, but I do not think she is idiosycratic in this). We do have both words. Do you argue that one is redundant? If you do not then what word do you prefer to use for what most people would call moral(ity): given you have decided to use that word to mean what most would call integrity?
 
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I saw earlier that you want to use the word moral(ity) where most people would use integrity (you mentioned Ayn Rand would use integrity for that idea, but I do not think she is idiosycratic in this). We do have both words. Do you argue that one is redundant? If you do not then what word do you prefer to use for what most people would call moral(ity): given you have decided to use that word to mean what most would call integrity?

Yes I am arguing that they are redundant.

But not to everyone. For instance when I was in the military, some guy in my training school squadron got drunk and 'relieved' himself in the hallway of a building. Those in charge called everyone to a meeting and suggested that someone should have the "integrity" to tell them who did it -- because that was the "right" thing to do. I found that to be contradictory, since they had previously stressed, more than anything else, the notions of teamwork and loyalty. In other words what I would think of as "integrity" would lead someone *not* to tell them who it was.
 
Did Fiona's statement I do believe that if a person makes any kind of choice at all which does no harm I must respect it: and I do believe that I must not steal someone else's choice, whether that choice is right or wrong

mean that the rape hypothetical is fine... since "it does no harm" and she's not stealing anyone's choice?
 
Did Fiona's statement I do believe that if a person makes any kind of choice at all which does no harm I must respect it: and I do believe that I must not steal someone else's choice, whether that choice is right or wrong

mean that the rape hypothetical is fine... since "it does no harm" and she's not stealing anyone's choice?

No
 


By your own hypothetical it does no harm-so you "must respect it".

And if you try to stop it you are taking away the choice of the person wanting sex, aren't you? So what do you do per whatever morality you subscribe to... and what do you call that morality and how do you imagine the utilitarian would act differently via what straw man... er, I mean via what explanation of utilitarianism that you think pales in comparison to wherever you derive your "moral truths"?
 
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Certainly any text which is not the original is subject to the interpretation of the person writing it. But that is not all I read. The understanding I have at present is based on what these sources seem to agree on. I do not think that is illegitmate.
I did not say it was illegitimate, I said that you were relying on a source that has been proven risibly unreliable in the past.
I am sorry. I thought it was clear from what I said that is not supported by Bentham. I referred to him and his cohort because I understood that Mill followed and built on Bentham and James Mill amongst others. It is true that in one of the succeeding paragraphs I referred to them both but I did think that it would be obvious I was trying to outline my understanding of Bentham, because later I said "Turning to Mill".
It is not just the reference to "Bentham and his cohort" but also your reference:
Your suggestion that the pleasure of the other is as important in determining the moral course ...
You will have to admit that by calling it my suggestion do you appear to be saying it is my suggestion and not Mill's suggestion.
So far as I can tell Bentham does not seem to see this as a problem because he seems to assume that the interests of the individual will coincide with the interests of society, so that proper pursuit of each individual's pleasure will necessarily increase the happiness of all.
What an absurd statement! Why would Bentham go to the extraordinary lengths of devising a complex calculus align the competing desires of the individual with the good of the community if he thought such such a thing completely unnecessary?
Robin said:
Please quote where Bentham specifically denies that another's happiness is equally important.
He denies it in his description of the "sympathetic sensibility". If he has another passage where he admits the possibility I will be glad to see it.
Robin said:
I don't think that either Bentham or Mill say that a person is only able to pursue their own happiness.
I think that is precisely what Bentham says. Can you show me where he denies it?
Yes - in "Principles" he says of the principle of utility:
Bentham said:
Not that there is or ever has been that human creature at breathing, however stupid or perverse, who has not on many, perhaps on most occasions of his life, deferred to it. By the natural constitution of the human frame, on most occasions of their lives men in general embrace this principle, without thinking of it: if not for the ordering of their own actions, yet for the trying of their own actions, as well as of those of other men.

Jeremy Bentham Principles of Morality and Legislation
That appears to be perfectly clear, not only does he admit the possibility, he strongly doubts any other possibility.
Fiona said:
Don't understand that. I usually contrast objective/subjective and normative/descriptive, so I think my thought was improperly conveyed. Bentham says that happiness is subjective. He propose his calculus as a means of making it objective, I think. It is in practice impossible to apply that calculus (perhaps you disagree, but I think it is). So we have to move to a rule based system based on what generally works, for most decisions we actually face. That is normative is it not?
No, it is not. Normative implies a standard. "What generally works" could not be called a standard.

So you have moved from your original position and I am not really sure what you are now arguing.
I disagree, as outlined above. There is clearly scope for different interpretations since you differ from SEP and the internet encyclopaedia of philosophy.
I have demonstrated how the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has been egregiously wrong on other subjects and shown how it contradicts Bentham's clear statement on the subject, so I see very little scope for disagreement here.
But if the pursuit of happiness is subjective and is the only moral thing then how do you distinguish it from psychological egoism?
The three little words you left out distinguishes it - Utilitarianism says the only moral thing is the pursuit of the happiness of the community.

But if I say that a policeman gains satisfaction from saving a life I am stating no more than the truth. But would you similarly say that the policeman was therefore only pursuing his self-interest by saving the life?

If you insist that there is no distinction then it is you who is subscribing to the principle of psychological egoism.
It is how I read this passage:
Well I don't think it supports your interpretation "cannot know in advance". The analogy is a Nautical Almanack and it does not follow that a sailor "cannot know in advance" that the information in the Almanack will lead them to their destination, on the contrary they have a reasonably well-grounded expectation that it will.

And as Mill points out, the adoption of these secondary principles is a practical necessity of every ethical system, not just Utilitarianism
Sorry I am not great at concise.
I had noticed.
I do not know what you mean by a "straightforward position" in this context
For a starters a "straightforward position" is one that is capable of being expressed concisely.
 
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We have something in our brains called "mirror neurons". We are wired to get joy from the joy of others. It's why we feel delight when a baby giggles, a dog wags it's tail or a cat purrs. We are also wired to hurt when we cause hurt to another through this same pathway. We all live vicariously... we've evolved to consider to have our happiness tied in with other peoples happiness and to feel uncomfortable when we harm another. We don't need religion to teach this to us... nor illusions... there are multiple ways of codifying it, putting it into words, and guiding the behavior of those whose brains haven't equipped them with underdeveloped, missing, or broken conscience wiring.
 
I dug out my old "Winds Twelve Quarters" to confirm my memory as stated earlier - LeGuin's point is not that the Omelans are happy, but that their happiness is a sham.

The point is made more forcefully in the Wiliam James argument, upon which the story is based:

..what except a specifical and independent sort of emotion can it be which would make us immediately feel, even though an impulse arose within us to clutch at the happiness so offered, how hideous a thing would be its enjoyment when deliberately accepted as the fruit of such a bargain?

"The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life," William James
I did not think LeGuin such a cynic about human nature, otherwise how could she seriously advance Anarchism as a serious political stance?

Also, that LeGuin's target is not Utilitarianism but the United States of America:
The dilemma of the American conscience can hardly be better stated.
And by a little digging I find that William James' target was not just Utilitarianism but all ethical philosophies, or as he says:
...to show that there is no such thing possible as an ethical philosophy dogmatically made up in advance
"The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life," William James
I think that is probably the most useful statement in the whole field of Ethics.

In turn James got the idea from Dostoevsky:
Imagine that you are charged with building the edifice of human destiny, the ultimate aim of which is to bring people happiness, to give them peace and contentment at last, but that in order to achieve this it is essential and unavoidable to torture just one little speck of creation, that same little child beating her chest with her little fists, and imagine that this edifice has to be errected on her unexpiated tears. Would you agree to be the architect under those conditions? Tell me honestly!

Fyodor Dostoevsky The Brother's Karamazov
 
I take that as a "no". But then, I wonder why you dislike the ideas of the arguably most influential advocate of consequentialism.
"Arguably" is the operative term. It is difficult to find someone who will completely agree with Singer. It is difficult to find a time when Singer will agree with himself when pressed on a particular issue.

It is very easy to find public Ethicists in various fields who violently disagree with him.

So he is our best known consequentialist, not the most influential one.
 
You can't have it both ways.

You have stated that the hypothetical rape does no harm*.

So the male nurse's decision is a decision that does no harm.

And you have stated that you must respect any kind of choice at all that does no harm.

So you must respect the male nurse's choice.

[edit]* In fact you have stenuously denied at some length that it does harm[/edit]
 
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