Mill's Principle of Utility: Origins, Proof, and Implications : Revised and Enlarged Edition
Mill's Principle of Utility: Origins, Proof, and Implications : Revised and Enlarged Edition
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Author(s): Fikri Alican, Necip
ISBN No.: 9789004503878
Pages: XXVI, 382
Year: 202201
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 273.24
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Foreword Preface Acknowledgments A Note on References Introduction part 1 Mill''s Principle of Utility and Scholarly Reactions to His Proof: Exegetical and Historical Background 1 Classical Utilitarianism before John Stuart Mill: The Legacy of Jeremy Bentham 1.1 History of Utilitarianism: Sources and References1.2 Bentham as an Anchor for Historical Insight1.3 Origins and Development of Utilitarian Nomenclature1.4 Bentham''s Debt to Predecessors and Contemporaries1.5 Patterns of Indirect Inspiration and Transmission1.6 Bentham''s Own Terminological Predilections 2 The Nature and Function of Mill''s Principle of Utility 2.1 What Is Bentham''s Principle of Utility?2.


2 What Is Mill''s Principle of Utility?2.3 The Multiple Functions of Mill''s Principle of Utility2.3.1 PU1: Theory of Value 2.3.2 PU2: Theory of Obligation 2.3.3 PU3: Theory of Justification 2.


4 Mill''s Apparent Definitions of the Principle of Utility2.5 The Primary Function of Mill''s Principle of Utility2.6 The Structure of Mill''s Proof of the Principle of Utility 3 The Historical Reception of Mill''s Proof of the Principle of Utility 3.1 John Grote: An Examination of the Utilitarian Philosophy 3.2 Henry Sidgwick: The Methods of Ethics 3.3 Francis Herbert Bradley: Ethical Studies 3.4 William Ritchie Sorley: The Ethics of Naturalism: A Criticism 3.5 John Dewey: Outlines of a Critical Theory of Ethics 3.


6 John Dewey and James Hayden Tufts: Ethics 3.7 John Stuart Mackenzie: A Manual of Ethics 3.8 George Edward Moore: Principia Ethica part 2 The Alleged Fallacies in Mill''s Proof of the Principle of Utility: Analysis and Response 4 The Alleged Fallacy of Equivocation in Mill''s Proof 4.1 Charges against Mill4.2 Analysis of the Charges4.2.1 False Discount Factor in Critical Evaluation 4.2.


2 Multiple Interpretations of "Desirable" 4.2.3 Alternative Formulations of Mill''s Argument 4.3 Response to the Charges4.3.1 The Principle of Charity in Critical Evaluation 4.3.2 The Methodology behind Mill''s Proof 4.


3.3 Desires as Evidence of Desirability 4.3.4 Distinction between Means and Ends 5 The Alleged Fallacy of Composition in Mill''s Proof 5.1 Charges against Mill5.2 Analysis of the Charges5.2.1 First Scenario 5.


2.2 Second Scenario 5.2.3 Third Scenario 5.2.4 Fourth Scenario 5.3 Response to the Charges5.3.


1 Deconstruction of the Fallacy of Composition 5.3.2 Mill''s Conception of the General Happiness 5.3.3 Mill''s Conception of the Aggregate of All Persons 5.4 Critical Summary of the Response 6 The Alleged Naturalistic Fallacy in Mill''s Proof 6.1 Moore''s Broad Construal of the Naturalistic Fallacy6.2 The Naturalistic Fallacy Anchored to the Good6.


3 The Alleged Naturalistic Fallacy in Mill''s Proof part 3 Mill''s Proof of the Principle of Utility: Reconstruction and Implications 7 Reconstruction of Mill''s Proof of the Principle of Utility 7.1 First Part of the Proof7.1.1 The Logical Role of Emphasis on the General Happiness 7.1.2 The Moral Implications of Emphasis on the General Happiness 7.2 Second Part of the Proof 8 Implications of Mill''s Proof of the Principle of Utility 8.1 Implications for a Theory of Moral Obligation8.


2 Directions for Further Research8.2.1 Act Utilitarianism vs. Rule Utilitarianism 8.2.2 Actual, Intended, and Foreseeable Consequences 8.2.3 Total and Average Happiness Works Cited Index.



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