Introduction
You have probably heard a politician say he or she passed a piece
of legislation because it did the greatest good for the greatest
number of citizens. Perhaps you have heard someone justify their
actions because it was for the greater good.
In this article, we are going to talk about the philosophy behind
such actions. The philosophy is known as utilitarianism. Although
it is a long word, it is in common usage every day. It is the
belief that the sole standard of morality is determined by its
usefulness.
Philosophers refer to it as a "teleological" system. The Greek word
"telos" means end or goal. This means that this ethical system
determines morality by the end result. Whereas Christian ethics are
based on rules, utilitarianism is based on results.
Utilitarianism began with the philosophies of Jeremy Bentham
(1748-1832) and John Stuart Mill (1806-1873). Utilitarianism gets
its name from Bentham's test question, "What is the use of it?" He
conceived of the idea when he ran across the words "the greatest
happiness of the greatest number" in Joseph Priestly's Treatise
of Government.
Jeremy Bentham developed his ethical system around the idea of
pleasure. He built it on ancient hedonism which pursued physical
pleasure and avoided physical pain. According to Bentham, the most
moral acts are those which maximize pleasure and minimize pain.
This has sometimes been called the "utilitarian calculus." An act
would be moral if it brings the greatest amount of pleasure and the
least amount of pain.
John Stuart Mill modified this philosophy and developed it apart
from Bentham's hedonistic foundation. Mill used the same
utilitarian calculus but instead focused on maximizing the general
happiness by calculating the greatest good for the greatest number.
While Bentham used the calculus in a quantitative sense, Mill used
this calculus in a qualitative sense. He believed, for example,
that some pleasures were of higher quality than others.
Utilitarianism has been embraced by so many simply because it seems
to make a good deal of sense and seems relatively simple to apply.
However, when it was first proposed, utilitarianism was a radical
philosophy. It attempted to set forth a moral system apart from
divine revelation and biblical morality. Utilitarianism focused on
results rather than rules. Ultimately the focus on the results
demolished the rules.
In other words, utilitarianism provided for a way for people to
live moral lives apart from the Bible and its prescriptions. There
was no need for an appeal to divine revelation. Reason rather than
revelation was sufficient to determine morality.
Founders of Utilitarianism
Jeremy Bentham was a leading theorist in Anglo-American philosophy
of law and one of the founders of utilitarianism. He developed this
idea of a utility and a utilitarian calculus in the Introduction
to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (1781).
In the beginning of that work Bentham wrote: "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."{1}
Bentham believed that pain and pleasure not only explain our
actions but also help us define what is good and moral. He believed
that this foundation could provide a basis for social, legal, and
moral reform in society.
Key to his ethical system is the principle of utility. That is,
what is the greatest good for the greatest number?
Bentham wrote: "By the principle of utility is meant that principle
which approves or disapproves of every action whatsoever, according
to the tendency which 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." {2}
John Stuart Mill was a brilliant scholar who was subjected to a
rigid system of intellectual discipline and shielded from boys his
own age. When Mill was a teenager, he read Bentham. Mill said the
feeling rushed upon him "that all previous moralists were
superseded." He believed that the principle of utility "gave unity
to my conception of things. I now had opinions: a creed, a
doctrine, a philosophy; in one among the best senses of the word,
a religion; the inculcation and diffusion of what could be made the
principle outward purpose of a life."{3}
Mill modified Bentham's utilitarianism. Whereas Bentham established
an act utilitarianism, Mill established a rule
utilitarianism. According to Mill, one calculates what is right by
comparing the consequences of all relevant agents of alternative
rules for a particular circumstance. This is done by comparing all
relevant similar circumstances or settings at any time.
Analysis of Utilitarianism
Why did utilitarianism become popular? There are a number of
reasons for its appeal.
First, it is a relatively simple ethical system to apply. To
determine whether an action is moral you merely have to calculate
the good and bad consequences that will result from a particular
action. If the good outweighs the bad, then the action is
moral.
Second, utilitarianism avoids the need to appeal to divine
revelation. Many adherents to this ethical system are looking for
a way to live a moral life apart from the Bible and a belief in
God. The system replaces revelation with reason. Logic rather than
an adherence to biblical principles guides the ethical decision-making
of a utilitarian.
Third, most people already use a form of utilitarianism in their
daily decisions. We make lots of non-moral decisions every day
based upon consequences. At the checkout line, we try to find the
shortest line so we can get out the door more quickly. We make most of
our financial decisions (writing checks, buying merchandise, etc.)
on a utilitarian calculus of cost and benefits. So making moral
decisions using utilitarianism seems like a natural extension of
our daily decision-making procedures.
There are also a number of problems with utilitarianism. One
problem with utilitarianism is that it leads to an "end justifies
the means" mentality. If any worthwhile end can justify the means
to attain it, a true ethical foundation is lost. But we all know
that the end does not justify the means. If that were so,
then Hitler could justify the Holocaust because the end was to
purify the human race. Stalin could justify his slaughter of
millions because he was trying to achieve a communist utopia.
The end never justifies the means. The means must justify
themselves. A particular act cannot be judged as good simply
because it may lead to a good consequence. The means must be judged
by some objective and consistent standard of morality.
Second, utilitarianism cannot protect the rights of minorities if
the goal is the greatest good for the greatest number. Americans in
the eighteenth century could justify slavery on the basis that it
provided a good consequence for a majority of Americans. Certainly
the majority benefited from cheap slave labor even though the lives
of black slaves were much worse.
A third problem with utilitarianism is predicting the consequences.
If morality is based on results, then we would have to have
omniscience in order to accurately predict the consequence of any
action. But at best we can only guess at the future, and often
these educated guesses are wrong.
A fourth problem with utilitarianism is that consequences
themselves must be judged. When results occur, we must still ask
whether they are good or bad results. Utilitarianism provides no
objective and consistent foundation to judge results because
results are the mechanism used to judge the action itself.
Situation Ethics
A popular form of utilitarianism is situation ethics first
proposed by Joseph Fletcher in his book by the same name.{4} Fletcher
acknowledges that situation ethics is essentially utilitarianism,
but modifies the pleasure principle and calls it the agape
(love) principle.
Fletcher developed his ethical system as an alternative to two
extremes: legalism and antinomianism. The legalist is like the
Pharisees in the time of Jesus who had all sorts of laws and
regulations but no heart. They emphasized the law over love.
Antinomians are like the libertines in Paul's day who promoted
their lawlessness.
The foundation of situation ethics is what Fletcher calls the law
of love. Love replaces the law. Fletcher says, "We follow law, if
at all, for love's sake."{5}
Fletcher even quotes certain biblical passages to make his case.
For example, he quotes Romans 13:8 which says, "Let no debt remain
outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for he
who loves his fellow man has fulfilled the law."
Another passage Fletcher quotes is Matthew 22:37-40. "Christ said,
‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul
and with all your mind. . . . Love your neighbor as yourself.'
All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments."
Proponents of situation ethics would argue that these summary
verses require only one absolute (the law of love). No other
universal laws can be derived from this commandment to love. Even
the Ten Commandments are subject to exceptions based upon the law
of love.
Situation ethics also accepts the view that the end justifies the
means. Only the ends can justify the means; the means cannot
justify themselves. Fletcher believes that "no act apart from its
foreseeable consequences has any ethical meaning
whatsoever."{6}
Joseph Fletcher tells the story of Lenin who had become weary of
being told that he had no ethics. After all, he used a very
pragmatic and utilitarian philosophy to force communism on the
people. So some of those around him accused him of believing that
the end justifies the means. Finally, Lenin shot back, "If the end
does not justify the means, then in the name of sanity and justice,
what does?"{7}
Like utilitarianism, situation ethics attempts to define morality
with an "end justifies the means" philosophy. According to
Fletcher, the law of love requires the greatest love for the
greatest number of people in the long run. But as we will see
in the next section, we do not always know how to define love, and we do not
always know what will happen in the long run.
Analysis of Situation Ethics
Perhaps the biggest problem with situation ethics is that the law
of love is too general. People are going to have different
definitions of what love is. What some may believe is a loving act,
others might feel is an unloving act.
Moreover, the context of love varies from situation to situation
and certainly varies from culture to culture. So it is even
difficult to derive moral principles that can be known and applied
universally. In other words, it is impossible to say that to
follow the law of love is to do such and such in every
circumstance. Situations and circumstances change, and so the moral
response may change as well.
The admonition to do the loving thing is even less specific than to
do what is the greatest good for the greatest number. It has about
as much moral force as to say to do the "good thing" or the "right
thing." Without a specific definition, it is nothing more than a
moral platitude.
Second, situation ethics suffers from the same problem of
utilitarianism in predicting consequences. In order to judge the
morality of an action, we have to know the results of the action we
are about to take. Often we cannot know the consequences.
Joseph Fletcher acknowledges that when he says, "We can't always
guess the future, even though we are always being forced to
try."{8} But according to his ethical system, we have to
know the results in order to make a moral choice. In fact,
we should be relatively certain of the consequences, otherwise our
action would by definition be immoral.
Situation ethics also assumes that the situation will determine the
meaning of love. Yet love is not determined by the particulars of
our circumstance but merely conditioned by them. The situation does
not determine what is right or wrong. The situation instead helps
us determine which biblical command applies in that particular
situation.
From the biblical perspective, the problem with utilitarianism and
situation ethics is that they ultimately provide no consistent
moral framework. Situation ethics also permits us to do evil to
achieve good. This is totally contrary to the Bible.
For example, Proverbs 14:12 says that "There is a way which
seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." The
road to destruction is paved with good intentions. This is a
fundamental flaw with an "ends justifies the means" ethical
system.
In Romans 6:1 Paul asks, "Are we to continue sinning so that grace
may increase?" His response is "May it never be!"
Utilitarianism attempts to provide a moral system apart from God's
revelation in the Bible, but in the end, it does not succeed.
Notes
1. Jeremy Bentham, An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, printed in 1781 and published in 1789 (Batoche Books: Kitchener, ON Canada, 2000), 14.
2. Ibid.
3. John Stuart Mill, "Last Stage of Education and First of Self-Education," Autobiography, 1873 (New York: P.F. Collier & Sons, 1909-14).
4. Joseph Fletcher, Situation Ethics: The New Morality (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1966).
5. Ibid., 70.
6. Ibid., 120.
7. Ibid., 121.
8. Ibid., 136.
© 2004 Probe Ministries
About the Author
About the Author
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is National Director of Probe Ministries International. He holds masters degrees from Yale University (science) and from Georgetown University (government). He is the author of several books, including Christian Ethics in Plain Language, Genetic Engineering, Origin Science, and Signs of Warning, Signs of Hope. His new series with Harvest House Publishers includes: A Biblical Point of View on Islam and A Biblical Point of View on Homosexuality. He is the host of "Point of View" (USA Radio Network) and regular guest on "Prime Time America" (Moody Broadcasting Network) and "Fire Away" (American Family Radio). He produces a daily syndicated radio commentary and writes editorials that have appeared in papers such as the Dallas Morning News, the Miami Herald, the San Jose Mercury, and the Houston Post. What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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