Mill, Utilitarianism, Chapter 2, Pages 12-33. Blackboard Notes
Mill, Utilitarianism, Chapter 2, Pages 12-33. Blackboard Notes
Mill, Utilitarianism, Chapter 2, Pages 12-33. Blackboard Notes
Page 12: Objection: “Happiness cannot be the rational purpose of human life and action; because, in the first place, it
is unattainable.”
Mill’s reply: Not so.
Page 15: Objection: Happiness is not the rational end and purpose of human life and action; virtue is a better end or
goal than happiness.
Mill’s reply: Virtue is morally desirable character. Individual virtues are morally desirable character traits like
courage, fortitude, temperance, honesty, etc. What character traits are morally desirable? The ones that do most to
promote total human happiness. An overall virtuous character, rightly conceived, is a set of traits that produces more
total human happiness than alternative feasible sets of traits. Virtue is desirable as a means to happiness, not desirable
intrinsically, for its own sake.
Page 16: If a person makes her happiness the goal of her life, that decreases her chances of becoming happy.
Pursuing happiness is self-defeating (the paradox of happiness).
Mill’s reply: It’s possible that directly aiming at one’s happiness is self-defeating as the objection alleges. Just suppose
this is true. Then to organize one’s life to maximize one’s chances of happiness one must follow an indirect strategy—
not aiming directly at happiness but learning to care about various things for their own sake, caring about which will
tend to make one happy. Maybe the same goes for pursuing the happiness of other people—to be successful in this
pursuit one must follow an indirect rather than a direct strategy. If so, pursuing happiness (for self or others) is not
necessarily self-defeating.
Page 16: Utilitarianism tells each person she ought above all to pursue her own happiness. Doing that wouldbeb
selfish.
Mill’s reply: “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.”
Page 17: Objection: Utilitarianism sets too high a standard of conduct for ordinary people. “It is expecting too much
to require that people shall always act from the inducement of promoting the general interest of society.”
Mill’s reply: “But this is to mistake the very meaning of a standard of morals and to confound the rule of action with
the motive of it.” Utilitarianism is a criterion of morally right and wrong action, not necessarily a practical decision-
making guide. Being motivated to conform always to utilitarian principle is not necessarily the motivation it is best to
have by the utility-maximizing standard. Mill holds that our actions mainly affect ourselves and those near and dear to
us, and that for the most part, the agent’s concern just for this narrow circle will suffice to induce right conduct.
[Example: Suppose that in particular circumstances, having a party is the right act, the act singled out as right by
utilitarian principle. But it might well be that if one were motivated by the desire to do whatever is right, or whatever
maximizes total utility, those motives would operate as a wet blanket, dampening otherwise available happiness.
Perhaps being spontaneously motivated by the desire to have some fun will lead to having a party that is more
enjoyable for all involved than being motivated by moral principle. Another example: Suppose Tom buys his mother a
gift for her birthday, and when she says that was a nice thing to do, he says, “Yes, I calculated that buying you a present
was, among the available alternatives, the act that would most maximize human happiness on the whole.” Or perhaps
even without saying anything his sourpuss highminded motivation expresses itself involuntarily and is detected by his
mother, who is left cold. She had hoped Tom was buying her a present because he loved her.]
[What motives should we cultivate in people, according to utilitarianism? One should according to utilitarianism
always do whatever will be happiness-maximizing. When one’s actions affect character and motive formation, one
should act in ways that will be happiness-maximizing. Suppose one has a child and could raise her to be either like
Mary or Martha, (cf. the New Testament characters). Martha always does the morally right thing according to
utilitarian principle, but her motivation dampens happiness. Mary is carefree and charming. Her strongest motivations
are to be sympathetic and kind and fun-loving. These motivations lead her to do some morally wrong acts, but overall
her life generates more happiness for people than Martha’s.
Act utilitarianism says one morally ought to form one’s child to be a Mary type and not a Martha type if the results are
as just stated. Mary does some acts that are wrong by the utilitarian standard but is a fountain of happiness for self and
others. Martha always does the right thing by utilitarian standards but with this motivation, causes people to
uncomfortable and unhappy.]
Page 22: Objection: Utilitarianism instructs people to do what is expedient rather than to stand fast by principle. In
the name of expediency one might lie, steal, cheat to maximize overall human happiness.
Mill’s reply: In ordinary speech, following the path of expediency rather than principle usually involves pursuing short-
term gain at the expense of greater long-term harm or one’s personal gain at the cost of greater losses suffered by
others. In this sense, acting in ways that are expedient is opposed to acting in ways that are right according to
utilitarian principle. Regarding the thought that utilitarianism leaves it an open question whether an individual ought to
obey or violate common-sense moral rules such as “Tell the Truth” and “Keep your promises,” Mill replies that
following these rules strictly in most circumstances is following the course of conduct most likely to be utility-
maximizing. But no common-sense moral rule should be obeyed come what may, regardless of consequences. In
unusual circumstances acting against even a deeply entrenched moral rule can be utility-maximizing, and in those cases
should be done.
Page 23: Objection: “there is not time, previous to action, for calculating and weighing the effects of any line of
conduct on the general happiness.”
Mill’s reply: In such circumstances, one should follow common-sense moral rules, which summarize lots of human
experience, and tend to guide us toward actions that promote general happiness and away from actions that tend to
dampen it. Also, one can cultivate habits and train individual character, so that people become disposed to act in ways
that are happiness-promoting. “Whatever we adopt as the fundamental principle of morality, we require subordinate
principles to apply it by.” Adopting utilitarianism as the fundamental principle, we need also subordinate principles—
moral rules that we train ourselves and other to follow because following them will for various reasons produce better
results as assessed by the fundamental principle than we would get if we directly applied the fundamental principle case
by case to decide what is due.
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UTILITARIANISM AND CONFORMITY TO COMMON-SENSE RULES.
Objection: The moral person, the person with integrity, stands fast by important moral rules including tell the truth,
keep your promises, be loyal to your friends, refrain from attacking innocent nonthreatening persons, respect the
private property of others, be faithful in love, and so on. In contrast, utilitarianism gives no moral standing to such
rules. Utilitarianism says one morally ought always to do whatever will maximize happiness (the general welfare), or
in other words lie or refrain from lying, kill the innocent or not, depending on what would in one’s particular
circumstances produce the best outcome (most total happiness).
Most of what Mill says in chapter 2 on this issue is consistent with act utilitarianism (roughly, the righter/wronger
test). One ought always to do whatever is utility-maximizing, and in the actual and likely circumstances of human
life, generally following the moral rules is what would maximize utility (happiness) compared to alternatives. But
when that is not so, one should violate not follow the rules. To give the rules more weight than that would be to fall
into unjustifiable rule worship.
Sometimes Mill suggests another proposal, different from and opposed to act utilitarianism. This would be some
version of rule utilitarianism. According to rule utilitarianism,, a two-step process fixes what is morally right to do.
Step one: Determine the set of rules that is utility-maximizing. Step two: Obey that code of rules (justifiable in terms
of the utility of the rules).
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There are various versions of rule utilitarianism. Mill suggests one version in a passage on page 19: “In the case of
abstinences indeed—of things which people forbear to do from moral considerations, though the consequences in the
particular case might be beneficial--it would be unworthy of an intelligent agent not to be consciously aware that the
action is of a class which, if practiced generally, would be generally injurious, and that this is the ground of the
obligation to abstain from it.” Here Mill says what makes an act right or wrong is not the quality of its actual
consequences (compared to those of feasible alternatives) but rather the hypothetical consequences that would be
generated if everyone made it a rule to behave the same way in relevantly similar circumstances. This suggests ideal
rule utilitarianism: One morally ought always to act in conformity with that ideal code of rules, conformity to
which by everyone would maximize utility.
This version of rule utilitarianism attracts the objection that the fact that a code of rules would produce ideal
consequences if everyone were to obey it does not seem to settle the question what one should do in the many actual
situations in which others are not conforming to this hypothetically ideal code. Pacifism (always refrain from using
violence and threat of violence to settle conflicts among persons) might well produce great consequences if everyone
were to conform to it but bad consequences in the many actual and likely circumstances in which other people are not
conforming to pacifism whatever one does.
Apart from the lone page 19 passage, the rest of chapter 2 seems consistent with an act utilitarian approach to social
rules. [The key is to note that if everyone were maximally well informed about the circumstances in which she acts,
ideally smart at figuring what act would maximize utility in her actual circumstances, and ideally disposed to do
whatever act utilitarianism requires, then each person should always use act utilitarianism as a decision procedure for
choosing what to do. But we actual humans are often not well informed, not ideally smart at figuring out what act of
those we might choose would produce most utility in the circumstances as we (perhaps incorrectly) understand them,
and disposed to be selfish and favor those near and dear to us, not disposed to act according to impartial utilitarian
principle. For people like us, actual humans, we would usually do better at fulfilling the act utilitarian principle if we
did not directly apply this principle to our choice of what to do but instead followed simple social rules like “Tell the
Truth” and “Do no harm” and “Keep your promises.” Call the ideal agent who is perfectly well informed, maximally
intelligent, and ideally disposed to follow impartial act utilitarian principles an “archangel.” When one faces a
particular decision problem, the more it is the case that one resembles the archangel, the more one should set aside
moral rules (or what Mill calls “subordinate principles”) and directly apply the act utilitarian test to decide what to do,
and the less one resembles the archangel, the more one should be disposed to forego direct act utilitarian calculation
and just follow whatever the going moral rules say one should do in one’s situation. Either way, the criterion or test of
the moral rightness of what one does, on this view, is act utilitarianism. At the level of fundamental moral principles,
the theoretical determiners of moral right and wrong, act utilitarianism (on this view) is correct, but on the level of
practical decision making, the best guides to follow (best by the act utilitarian standard) may be the going moral rules.
Following this same train of thought, one might hold it is right, according to act utilitarianism, to train people to accept
and follow simple moral rules rather than to apply act utilitarian calculation case by case to the choice of what to do.
(The ideas in this paragraph are borrowed from R. M. Hare, not a course author.) When one follows the going
social/moral rules, the consequences will be better or worse, according to utilitarian assessment, depending on the
quality of the rules actually entrenched in one’s society. Recall Huck Finn.]
Rawls: A third alternative. John Rawls argues that utilitarianism can be stated in a way that makes it not vulnerable
to a standard objection if one keeps in mind the distinctions between the summary and practice conceptions of rules and
between justifying an act that falls under a practice and one that does not. He uses the social practices of punishment
and promising to illustrate his points. The standard objection is that utilitarianism holds that promise breaking is
justified in any case in which breaking a promise produces even a slight net gain of utility on the whole. Also,
utilitarianism justifies punishing a person of a crime he did not commit if doing so in the particular circumstances
would produce even a slight net gain of utility. In each case, the objection runs, utilitarianism fails adequately to
register the obligation to keep a promise one has made and the duty not to punish the innocent as considerations that
should affect what one ought to do.
Rawls contends that the discussion fails adequately to register the fact that punishing and promising are social
practices. A social practice is an activity constituted by rules in the sense that the rules define and make possible
behavior that could not exist absent the rules. For example, the rules of baseball define what it is to play baseball and
specify, for example, that after three strikes, you’re out. Absent the rules defining the practice there could be no such
thing as a pitcher striking out a batter.
We should think of the justification of punishing and promising as proceeding in two steps for the utilitarian. If one
asks, in a setting where the rules specify what one should do, how should one act, the answer is given by the rules. In a
criminal trial, the judge should follow the rules of criminal procedure. So if one asks, why put Smith, the accused, in
prison, the answer is that he was convicted of an offense after a fair trial and has been sentenced to four years of
imprisonment. In a similar way, if one asks, why should I return this necklace to Mary now, if one has promised to do
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so, the answer refers to the informal rules of the promising institution. One should return the necklace because that is
what one promised to do and promising involves undertaking an obligation to do what one has promised. But we can
ask another sort of question. We can ask, why have a social practice with these rules. According to the utilitarian, the
answer is that if the practice is justified, then its rules are such that the operation of the practice works to advance utility
and alteration or abolition of the practice would not result in greater utility but less.
According to Rawls, there is a confusion if one supposes a utilitarian calculation might yield the verdict that one should
pay no heed to the promise one has made or that the judge in a criminal trial should rig the proceeding to procure the
judicial punishment of the innocent. By what authority would the judge act in this way? The practice does not give
such discretion to those who act under it and moreover it would not be a good strategy to promote utility to alter these
practices to give agents a wide discretion to suspend the rules and do whatever they think is utility-maximizing in the
circumstances. One has to envisage an institution with rules that allow one who has made a promise to give it no
weight in further decisions about what to do or that allow a criminal prosecutor to falsify evidence to secure the result
she deems best on the whole. Building such exceptions to the normal rules into the practice and giving such wide
discretion to those regulated by the practice would be an outstandingly bad utilitarian strategy. But if one cannot devise
a practice that allows “punishing” the innocent and that would be justifiable on utilitarian grounds, then in the course of
operation of the practice of criminal punishment it cannot be a live issue whether one should bring about “punishment”
of the innocent. What one should do when acting within a practice is set by the rules of the practice. In baseball, it
would be a bad joke if a batter on a particular occasion proposed to the umpire that she should have four strikes because
making this allowance would produce more happiness on the whole.
Of course, our ordinary understanding of a promise does not hold that a promise may never be broken no matter what.
The ordinary practice of promising includes a vague escape clause, so that when one promises, a proviso is implicit, to
the effect that if the consequences of keeping the promise turned out to be unexpectedly extremely bad, the promise
would no longer be binding. But this type of exception is built into the rules that define the practice. In a somewhat
similar way, the rules of criminal procedure do not guarantee that no person accused of a crime and put on trial will
never be found guilty and punished by a fair proceeding if she is innocent. The rules of a fair trail cannot guarantee
perfect outcomes. But the law of criminal procedure does unequivocally forbid a judge, jury, or prosecutor deliberately
and knowingly to seek to bring about the judicial punishment of someone for an offense who is innocent of that
offense.
Rawls distinguishes what he calls the summary and practice conception of rules. Both conceptions make sense.
According to the summary conception, a rule is a rule of thumb—a guide to decision making that in effect summarizes
the results of past experience and gives guidance about how to proceed to get desired outcomes. The rules of gardening
such as “plant in the spring,” “weed your garden vigorously,” and “harvest just at the peak of ripeness of the crop” are
examples of summary rules. They guide behavior that is itself not defined or constituted by the rules. In contrast, when
a rule is a practice rule, it established or defines kinds of behavior that could not exist absent the rule. In this sense the
rules are logically prior to the behavior the rules regulate. One could not strike out a batter—there would be no such
thing—except that the rules of baseball specify what counts as a batter, a pitcher, a strike, and so on.
According to Rawls, both many utilitarians and their critics make the mistake of failing to notice the existence and
significance of rules of practices. They discuss utilitarianism and its implications for right conduct and right policy as
though all rules were summary rules. But this is a fatal error. If one is dealing with summary rules, the rules have no
force as reasons except as guidance about what behavior is likely to get good results. It would be objectionable rule
worship to appeal to the summary rules as authoritative determiners of what one ought to do in circumstances where it
is acknowledged following these rules will do no good. But it is not mere rule worship but acknowledgement of the
logical distinction between summary and practice rules to deny that utilitarianism properly understood can recommend
violating the rules of a practice, for example, by procuring deliberately the judicial punishment of the innocent. (To
avoid the irrelevant concern that by definition punishment if imposition of hard treatment on one who is guilty of an
offense, Rawls considers whether utilitarianism might go wrong by favoring in some circumstances telishment of the
innocent, where telishment is just like punishment but may sometimes be imposed on the innocent. Rawls says that
one would have to formulate a set of rules that define telishment to assess it from a utilitarian standpoint, and once one
makes the assessment at the level of practice rules, it is obvious that no such practice as telishment could be justified as
utility-maximizing.)
By the way, Rawls in this essay is not asserting that utilitarianism is justifiable all things considered. In the essay he
does not commit himself one way or another as to the overall acceptability of the utilitarian doctrine. His point is that
one standard objection against utilitarianism can be seen to misfire once one takes account of the distinction between
summary and practice rules and properly considers what the utilitarian should say about the justification of a practice
and the justification of behavior that is internal to the practice.
1. As stated, Rawls’s view is incomplete. He says that according to utilitarianism the rules of practices should be set so
as to maximize utility and individuals engaged in practices should follow their rules. As it stands, this says that what
an individual should do when a practice rule applies depends on the actual rule in force, and assumes it has been set so
it has a utilitarian justification. This view is incomplete in that it does not tell individuals what to do when they are
engaged in practices whose rules that are not optimal from a utilitarian standpoint.
2. More important, Rawls seems to overstate the reason-giving force of an applicable practice rule in determining what
a person ought to do. Suppose I am a judge in a jurisdiction shaken by a terrible crime wave. Exemplary punishment
imposed swiftly on some prominent accused persons who are universally believed to be guilty as charged will
predictably lower the crime rate and save lives of innocent crime victims. It turns out that these prominent accused
persons are not in fact guilty, but the evidence that shows this is known only to the prosecuting attorney and the judge
and they can conspire to keep it secret in violation of the criminal code. The judge then can choose to follow the
practice rules of criminal procedure or violate them and produce a net saving of innocent lives. The act utilitarian (I
submit) will then say that if the overall consequences of violating the rules are utilitarianly better than the consequences
overall of abiding by the rules, the judge ought to violate the rules. In this case, it is true that the judge’s behavior
could not be what it is absent the rules. But this will be true whether she conforms to the rules or violates them. The
fact that one’s behavior is only describable as “violating the rules of criminal procedure” or as “conforming to the rules
of criminal procedure” because the practice rules exist does not tell the act utilitarian judge whether she ought to abide
or conform. From an act utilitarian standpoint, Rawls goes astray in supposing that the mere existence of a practice
rule has magical force in determining what one ought to do. This is from the act utilitarian standpoint a species of rule
worship. Understanding the logical distinction between summary and practice rules does not have the implications for
what one should do that Rawls supposes.
One should understand the difference between establishing practice rules and doing what the rules prescribe in a
particular case. But the act utilitarian judge who secretly conspires to bring about the punishment of the innocent to
bring about the greater good need not be conceptually confused in any way. In fact it would be a confusion to suppose
that anyone who favors breaking the rules of a practice on a particular occasion must somehow be recommending an
alteration in the rules of the practice. It may be that the legislators establishing a practice find the rules that are best
from a utilitarian standpoint and enact just those perfect utilitarian rules. It still might be that on some particular
occasion, one can gain extra utility by violating the rules of a practice even if the rules are impeccable from a utilitarian
standpoint. To fail to appreciate this possibility is to fail to understand the idea of a practice rule.
Rawls’s baseball example that seems to support his case actually undermines his position if you think about it.
Suppose we are playing sandlot baseball and Sally proposes that it would be best (happiness-maximizing) on the whole
to give her little brother Sammy four strikes. Sometimes in this situation the other players agree and Sammy is given
four strikes (or perhaps one just surreptitiously lets Sammy have an extra chance at bat without anyone else noticing
this anomaly). The fact that this conflicts with the rules of baseball does not show it is unjustified or could not be
justified. No doubt if players were always proposing to renegotiate or suspend the ordinary rules the game could not
proceed. But this precludes neither occasional relaxation or suspension of the rules nor cheating against them. There is
something to be said against messing with the rules of practices but this does not begin to show it is never justified
according to act utilitarianism. What is true of informal (“sandlot”) practices is true of all others including formal
practices in which playing the game by the rules is viewed rightly as important by spectators and participants. Still,
there may be exceptions that an act utilitarian should recognize, and the mere fact that some behavior is internal to
practices does not gainsay this possibility.
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Question: what’s the upshot of this discussion? You might consider whether Rawls’s argument can be defended
against the criticisms just noted. Even if it can’t be defended, this would not show act utilitarianism is correct, but only
that Rawls’s criticism of act utilitarians and their critics (that both ignore the importance of the distinction between the
practice and summary conceptions of rules) misfires. The objection against utilitarianism that it is unfair to punish the
innocent even if it would maximize human happiness on the whole to do so might be a good objection for all that
Rawls has said. Mill takes up this question in chapter 5.