|
Happiness
Is to Do What Is Good for All People
by Jeremy Bentham
The Principle of
Utility
Nature has placed mankind under the governance
of two sovereign masters, pain and
pleasure. It is for them alone to point out
what we ought to do, as well as to determine what
we shall do. On the one hand the standard of right
and wrong, on the other the chain of causes and
effects, are fastened to their throne. They govern
us in all we do, in all we say, in all we think:
every effort we can make to throw off our
subjection, will serve but to demonstrate and
confirm it. In words a man may pretend to abjure
their empire: but in reality he will remain.
subject to it all the while. The principle of
utility recognizes this subjection, and assumes
it for the foundation of that system, the object of
which is to rear the fabric of felicity by the
hands of reason and of law. Systems which attempt
to question it, deal in sounds instead of sense, in
caprice instead of reason, in darkness instead of
light.
But enough of metaphor and declamation: it is
not by such means that moral science is to be
improved.
The principle of utility is the foundation of
the present work: it will be proper therefore at
the outset to give an explicit and determinate
account of what is meant by it. By the principle of
utility is meant that principle which approves or
disapproves of every action whatsoever. according
to the tendency it appears to have to augment or
diminish the happiness of the party whose interest
is in question: or, what is the same thing in other
words to promote or to oppose that happiness. I say
of every action whatsoever, and therefore not only
of every action of a private individual, but of
every measure of government.
By utility is meant that property in any object,
whereby it tends to produce benefit, advantage,
pleasure, good, or happiness, (all this in the
present case comes to the same thing) or (what
comes again to the same thing) to prevent the
happening of mischief, pain, evil, or unhappiness
to the party whose interest is considered: if that
party be the community in general, then the
happiness of the community: if a particular
individual, then the happiness of that
individual.
The interest of the community is one of the most
general expressions that can occur in the
phraseology of morals: no wonder that the meaning
of it is often lost. When it has a meaning, it is
this. The community is a fictitious body,
composed of the individual persons who are
considered as constituting as it were its
members. The interest of the community then
is, what is it? -- the sum of the interests of the
several members who compose it.
It is in vain to talk of the interest of the
community, without understanding what is the
interest of the individual. A thing is said to
promote the interest, or to be for the
interest, of an individual, when it tends to add to
the sum total of his pleasures: or, what comes to
the same thing, to diminish the sum total of his
pains.
An action then may be said to be conformable to
then 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.
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. . .
.
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.
Principles Adverse
to That of Utility
If the principle of utility be a right principle
to be governed by, and that in all cases, it
follows from what has been just observed, that
whatever principle differs from it in any case must
necessarily be a wrong one. To prove any other
principle, therefore, to be a wrong one, there
needs no more than just to show it to be what it
is, a principle of which the dictates are in some
point or other different from those of the
principle of utility: to state it is to confute
it.
A principle may be different from that of
utility in two ways: I. By being constantly opposed
to it: this is the case with a principle which may
be termed the principle of asceticism. 2. By
being sometimes opposed to it, and sometimes not,
as it may happen: this is the case with another,
which may be termed the principle of
sympathy and antipathy.
By the principle of asceticism I mean that
principle, which, like the principle of utility,
approves or disapproves of any action, according to
the tendency which it appears to have to augment or
diminish the happiness of the party whose interest
is in question; but in an inverse manner: approving
of actions in as far as they tend to diminish his
happiness; disapproving of them in as far as they
tend to augment it. . . .
The principle of asceticism seems originally to
have been the reverie of certain hasty speculators,
who having perceived, or fancied, that certain
pleasures, when reaped in certain circumstances,
have, at the long run, been attended with pains
more than equivalent to them, took occasion to
quarrel with every thing that offered itself under
the name of pleasure. Having then got thus far, and
having forgot the point which they set out from,
they pushed on, and went so much further as to
think it meritorious to fall in love with pain.
Even this, we see, is at bottom but the principle
of utility misapplied.
The principle of utility is capable of being
consistently pursued; and it is but tautology to
say, that the more consistently it is pursued, the
better it must ever be for human-kind. The
principle of asceticism never was, nor ever can be,
consistently pursued by any living creature. Let
but one tenth part of the inhabitants of this earth
pursue it consistently, and in a day's time they
will have turned it into a hell.
Among principles adverse to that of utility,
that which at this day seems to have most influence
in matters of government, is what may be called the
principle of sympathy and antipathy. By the
principle of sympathy and antipathy, I mean that
principle which approves or disapproves of certain
actions, not on account of their tending to augment
the happiness, nor yet on account of their tending
to diminish the happiness of the party whose
interest is in question, but merely because a man
finds himself disposed to approve or disapprove of
them: holding up that approbation or disapprobation
as a sufficient reason for itself, and disclaiming
the necessity of looking out for any extrinsic
ground. Thus far in the general department of
morals: and in the particular department of
politics, measuring out the quantum (as well as
determining the ground) of punishment, by the
degree of the disapprobation.
It is manifest, that this is rather a principle
in name than in reality: it is not a positive
principle of itself, so much as a term employed to
signify the negation of all principle. What one
expects to find in a principle is something that
points out some external consideration, as a means
of warranting and guiding the internal sentiments
of approbation and disapprobation: this expectation
is but ill fulfilled by a proposition, which does
neither more nor less than hold up each of those
sentiments as a ground and standard for itself.
In looking over the catalogue of human actions
(says a partizan of this principle) in order to
determine which of them are to be marked with the
seal of disapprobation, you need but to take
counsel of your own feelings: whatever you find in
yourself a propensity to condemn, is wrong for that
very reason. For the same reason it is also meet
for punishment: in what proportion it is adverse to
utility, or whether it be adverse to utility at
all, is a matter that makes no difference. In that
same proportion also is it meet for
punishment: if you hate much, punish much: if you
hate little, punish little: punish as you hate. If
you hate not at all, punish not at all: the fine
feelings of the soul are not to be overborne and
tyrannized by the harsh and rugged dictates of
political utility.
The various systems that have been formed
concerning the standard of right may all be reduced
to the principle of sympathy and antipathy. One
account may serve to for all of them. They consist
all of them in so many contrivances for avoiding
the obligation of appealing to any external
standard, and for prevailing upon the reader to
accept of the author's sentiment or opinion as a
reason for itself.
The Hedonistic
Calculus
Pleasures then, and the avoidance of pains, are
the ends that the legislator has in view; it
behoves him therefore to understand their
value. Pleasures and pains are the
instruments he has to work with: it behoves
him therefore to understand their force, which is
again, in other words, their value.
To a person considered by himself, the
value of a pleasure or pain considered by
itself, will be greater or less, according to
the four following circumstances:
- 1. Its intensity.
-
- 2. Its duration.
-
- 3. Its certainty or
uncertainty.
-
- 4. Its propinquity or
remoteness.
These are the circumstances which are to be
considered in estimating a pleasure or a pain
considered each of them by itself. But when the
value of any pleasure or pain is considered for the
purpose of estimating the tendency of any
act by which it is produced, there are two
other circumstances to be taken into the account;
these are,
- 5. Its fecundity, or the chance it
has of being followed by sensations of the
same kind: that is, pleasures, if it be a
pleasure: pains, if it be a pain.
-
- 6. Its purity, or the chance it has
of not being followed by sensations of
the opposite kind: that is, pains, if it
be a pleasure: pleasures, if it be a pain.
These two last, however, are in strictness
scarcely to be deemed properties of the pleasure or
the pain itself; they are not, therefore, in
strictness to be taken into the account of the
value of that pleasure or that pain. They are in
strictness to be deemed properties only of the act,
or other event, by which such pleasure or pain has
been produced; and accordingly are only to be taken
into the account of the tendency of such act or
such event.
To a number of persons, with reference to
each of whom to the value of a pleasure or a pain
is considered, it will be greater or less,
according to seven circumstances: to wit, the six
preceding ones; viz.
- 1. Its intensity.
-
- 2. Its duration.
-
- 3. Its certainty or
uncertainty.
-
- 4. Its propinquity or
remoteness.
-
- 5. Its fecundity.
-
- 6. Its purity.
And one other; to wit:
- 7. Its extent; that is, the number of
persons to whom it extends; or (in other
words) who are affected by it.
To take an exact account then of the general
tendency of any act, by which the interests of a
community are affected, proceed as follows. Begin
with any one person of those whose interests seem
most immediately to be affected by it: and take an
account,
- 1. Of the value of each distinguishable
pleasure which appears to be produced by
it in the first instance.
-
- 2. Of the value of each pain which
appears to be produced by it in the first
instance.
-
- 3. Of the value of each pleasure which
appears to be produced by it after the
first. This constitutes the fecundity of
the first pleasure and the
impurity of the first pain.
-
- 4. Of the value of each pain which
appears to be produced by it after the first.
This constitutes the fecundity of the
first pain, and the impurity of
the first pleasure.
-
- 5. Sum up all the values of all the
pleasures on the one side, and those of
all the pains on the other. The balance,
if it be on the side of pleasure, will give the
good tendency of the act upon the whole,
with respect to the interests of that
individual person; if on the side of
pain, the bad tendency of it upon the
whole.
-
- 6. Take an account of the number of
persons whose interests appear to be concerned;
and repeat the above process with respect to
each. Sum up the numbers expressive of
the degrees of good tendency, which the
act has, with respect to each individual, in
regard to whom the tendency of it is good upon
the whole: do this again with respect to each
individual, in regard to whom the tendency of it
is good upon the whole: do this again
with respect to each individual, in regard to
whom the tendency of it is bad upon the
whole. Take the balance: which if on the
side of pleasure, will give the general
good tendency of the act, with respect to
the total number or community of individuals
concerned; if on the side of pain,the
general evil tendency, with respect to
the same community.
It is not to be expected that this process
should be strictly pursued previously to every
moral judgment, or to every legislative or judicial
operation. It may, however, be always kept in view:
and as near as the process actually pursued on
these occasions approaches to it, so near will such
process approach to the character of an exact
one.
Motives
With respect to goodness and badness, as it is
with very thing else that is not itself either pain
or pleasure, so is it with motives. If they are
good or bad, it is only on account of their
effects: good, on account of their tendency to
produce pleasure, or avert pain: bad, on account of
their tendency to produce pain, or avert pleasure.
Now the case is, that from one and the same motive,
and from every kind of motive, may proceed actions
that are good, others that are bad, and others that
are indifferent. . . .
It appears then that there is no such thing as
any sort of motive which is a bead one in itself:
nor, consequently, any such thing as a sort of
motive, which in itself is exclusively a good one.
And as to their effects, it appears too that these
are sometimes bad, at other times either
indifferent or good: and this appears to be the
case with every sort of motive. If any sort of
motive then is either good or bad on the score of
its effects, this is the case only on individual
occasions, and with individual motives; and
this is the case with one sort of motive as well as
with another. If any sort of motive then can, in
consideration of its effects, be termed with any
propriety a bad one, it can only be with
reference to the balance of all the effects it may
have had of both kinds within a given period, that
is, of its most usual tendency.
What then? (it will be said) are not lust,
cruelty, avarice, bad motives? Is there so much as
any one individual e occasion, in which motives
like these can be otherwise than bad? No,
certainly: and yet the proposition, that there is
no one sort of motive but what will on many
occasions be a good one, is nevertheless true. The
fact is, that these are names which, if properly
applied, are never applied but in the cases where
the motives they signify happen to be bad. The
names of those motives, considered apart from their
effects, are sexual desire, displeasure, and
pecuniary interest. To sexual desire, when the
effects of it are looked upon as bad, is given the
name of lust. Now lust is always a bad motive. Why?
Because if the case be such, that the effects of
the motive are not bad, it does not go, or at least
ought not to go, by the name of lust. The case is,
then, that when I say, " Lust is a bad motive ", it
is a proposition that merely concerns the import of
the word lust; and which would be false if
transferred to the other word used for the same
motive, sexual desire. Hence we see the emptiness
of all those rhapsodies of common-place morality,
which consist in the taking of such names as lust,
cruelty, and avarice, and branding them with marks
of reprobation: applied to the thing, they
are false; applied to the name, they are true
indeed, but nugatory. Would you do a real service
to mankind, show them the cases in which sexual
desire merits the name of lust; displeasure,
that of cruelty; and pecuniary interest, that of
avarice.
Excerpted from An
Introduction to the Principles of Morals and
Legislation, by Jeremy Bentham
(1823)
Biography in The
Radical Academy: Jeremy Bentham
|
The
Principles of Morals and Legislation, by Jeremy
Bentham
Order
at Powell's Books
|