Concluding, I would like to bring two points up for analysis, as to whether the reader thinks utilitarianism has been a philosophy that has been neglected by philosophers, and instead (literally) personified by economists been ennobled? Is there any discrepancy between the two, and has utilitarianism perhaps attained the greatest prestige of any school of thought from within the field of philosophy? — Shawn
As far as a base level ethical framework, Utilitarianism, I hold, should be one of the primary starting points when alayzing any ethical dilemma. — Garrett Travers
There isn't a single philosophical framework that I know of that doesn't incorporate a good deal of utilitarian ethics. Period. As far as it being the ONLY metric by which to calculate ethics, I would say that has the potential to do more harm than imaginable, and has been used by tyrants in the past to justify their atrocities. However, economics is not a utilitarian practice, fundamentally, and never should be. — Garrett Travers
Very few people are motivated by anything short of greed, and greed is not an evil. In fact, praxiologically, it is going to be difficult for anyone to make the case that they aren't motivated almost exclusively by what has been termed "greed," which I would, in that specific sense, regard as irrational self-interest, or self-interest with a disregard to people's rights. Greed is what motivates coal miners to keep the lights on, ford workers to produce vehicles, and grocers to supply food. It's the greed that isn't associated with production that needs to be critical analyzed (Washington), as well as the greed that is associated with violating rights; which I hold, a Free Market would address naturally on its own through competition. Economics is an exercise in self-attained material success, motivated by greed, propelled by labor. So, the two are fundamentally different, utilitarianism and economics. One operates in the domain of ethical analysis, the other operates in the domain of individual attainment. — Garrett Travers
There is a fundamental dilemma here about utilitarianism having a criteria upon which one can assign values onto consequentialist outcomes of behavior or outcomes of behavior. — Shawn
Economics seems to be a field that developed after utilitarianism became a more abstract field dealing with the quantitative ascriptives of numerical values onto outcomes. Given that interpretation, I would think that ever more latter fields like game theory or what used to be called a calculus of utility would be of merit in describing it as an extension of what one would call Bentham's or Mill's hedonic calculus, no? — Shawn
In as much as greed is a motivating factor, I think the more appropriate term here is rational self-interest. I believe, that rational self-interest is what mandates a rational process or deliberate process of transactions and trades between individuals to reach a consensus of interests at an agreed value of exchange towards a unit of value, being money. I also think that given the assumption that people desire to be happy rather than sad, that the system is self-sustaining, as long as demand is governed by expectations in accordance with realistic outcomes. But, more philosophically, there's a point to be made of greed that philosophy cannot address with a hedonistic calculus, without making reference towards our inherent natures. — Shawn
There is a fundamental dilemma here about utilitarianism having a criteria upon which one can assign values onto consequentialist outcomes of behavior or outcomes of behavior. — Shawn
I don't know what this means. You mean to say it is hard to evaluate outcomes? — Garrett Travers
What I mean is that when devising a calculus, the process of assigning values on qualitative outcomes demands an ethical framework to designate those quantitative values onto. I hope that makes better sense. The fact that one must engage in denoting what human behavior ought to do in certain scenarios is where consequentialism runs into a dead-end and we have to pick or choose an ethical system to designate these values into those desired outcomes. — Shawn
However, to speed the calculus along, I'd reiterate that it is ESSENTIAL that people differentiate rational self-interest, greed predicated upon productivity and a respect for individual sovereignty, and that of actual greed, self-interest predicated upon the labor of others and a disregard for individual sovereignty. — Garrett Travers
You are working some kind of prosperity gospel where the material interests of some are legitimate, but the desires of others are not. — Paine
Recognizing there is a similarity is not the same as condoning bad behavior.
I don't get what identity has do with it. — Paine
So, for this dilemma I draw your attention back to me saying that Utilitarianism as a base ethical methodology is great, but it isn't the only one. What I have found is that most of the world's ethical frameworks are compatible. So, for instance , if you want to determine if a given action is ethical, you might ask this series of questions, however the scenario is not limited to these, just an example: Am I being sufficiently stoic in this scenario? Is what I plan to do predicated on a rational assessment of the situation, or on my emotions? Will my actions produce better results for all involved if I entangle myself? Is what I plan to do the expression of a universally symmetrical principle? Would the situation require force on my part to see my actions executed?
Do you see what I am saying? Instead of merely relying on that singular framework, which in most cases is not sufficient to be totally relied on, draw from as many as possible, so that it is clear you are making as rational attempt as possible. Unfortunately, the future is always going to be a mystery, thus a true evaluation of outcomes requires one evaluate them only after actions have been taken. — Garrett Travers
Does utilitarianism render ethics useless? — Shawn
No, its one of the most sophisticated epistemologies there is. It furthers ethics, provides it more clarity. Again, I defer you to the multifarious ethical frameworks that can be drawn from in a given scenario, as exampled in the above series of questions I listed. — Garrett Travers
You say it is okay for some to want stuff. It is less okay for others. — Paine
My reference to bad behavior was not a claim about what you meant to say. — Paine
So, instead of appealing to multifaceted ethical frameworks, it seems that utilitarianism sidesteps them by assuming that humans don't necessarily need to be watched over by Bentham's desire for government to oversee all activities of human interaction. Of course, this means that the whole thing is self-reinforcing. — Shawn
Oh, I see. Yes, I would agree. At the end of the day, any ethical framework is going to be the responsibility of the individual to employ. Generally speaking, humans tend to their own affairs well enough without oversight, or at least well enough to get along. If I'm understanding what you're saying properly. — Garrett Travers
Most people don't realize that utilitarianism is fully coherent ethical epistemology that is reliable. — Garrett Travers
However, economics is not a utilitarian practice, fundamentally, and never should be. Very few people are motivated by anything short of greed, and greed is not an evil. In fact, praxiologically, it is going to be difficult for anyone to make the case that they aren't motivated almost exclusively by what has been termed "greed," which I would, in that specific sense, regard as irrational self-interest, or self-interest with a disregard to people's rightsAs far as a base level ethical framework, Utilitarianism, I hold, should be one of the primary starting points when alayzing any ethical dilemma. And as far as its presitige, it inarguably dominates the theoretical ethical landscape. There isn't a single philosophical framework that I know of that doesn't incorporate a good deal of utilitarian ethics. Period.
Do you think this is true of post-marxist, postmodernist and phenomenological philosophies as well? And what about Nietzsche’s relentless critiques of utilitarianism? I guess what I’m wondering is if utilitarianism is a big enough umbrella ( isnt consequentialiam an even bigger umbrella?) to cover political and ethical positions extending to the far left as well as the right.
— Garrett Travers
I’m sure you would agree that utilitarianism and ethical philosophy in general is based around an understanding of concepts like rationality , motivation, emotion and hedonism. Such notions are obviously involved in notions
like greed, self-interest and distinctions between the rational and the irrational, and between rationality and emotion. — Joshs
I bring this up because, given your professed respect for
the scientific method, I wonder what you feel is the relevance of the latest ideas in cognitive neuroscience for the ethical philosophy. For instance, many segments of contemporary psychology have all but abandoned the classic distinction between the rational and the irrational that you seem to uphold , and the opposition between the affective and the cognitive in the wake of research by people like Damasio, Panksepp and the predictive processing community. Among those who accept the implications of this research, it seems libertarian political views are a rarity. Is this just coincidence? Are these science theories politically motivated? Should we expect that utilitarian models originating 300 years ago should survive intact when the psychological assumptions they are based on have changed significantly in recent years? — Joshs
It's not often that a field of science has arisen from the Philosophical Radicals of Bentham and latter John Stuart Mill all the way from England. Bentham and John Stuart Mill had a profound influence on the development of the United States. Sadly, the birth of socialism from the Philosophical Radicals in England found no welcoming from the United States. It seems that selfishness and greed prosper more than anything else nowadays instead of Bentham's liberalism. — Shawn
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.