AN INTRODUCTION TO THE PRINCIPLES OF MORALS
AND LEGISLATION
JEREMY BENTHAM
(1748-1832)
|
The First Edition of this work was printed
in the year 1780; and first published in
1789. The present rendering is a reprint
of 'A New Edition, corrected by the Author,'
which was published in 1823. Jeremy Bentham ( 15 February 1748 - 6 June
1832) was an English jurist, philosopher,
and legal and social reformer. He became
a leading theorist in Anglo-American philosophy
of law, and a political radical whose ideas
influenced the development of welfarism.
He is best known for his advocacy of utilitarianism
and animal rights and the idea of the panopticon.
His position included arguments in favour
of individual and economic freedom, usury,
the separation of church and state, freedom
of expression, equal rights for women, the
right to divorce, and the decriminalizing
of homosexual acts. He argued for the abolition
of slavery and the death penalty and for
the abolition of physical punishment, including
that of children. Although strongly
in favour of the extension of individual
legal rights, he opposed the idea of natural
law and natural rights, calling them "nonsense
upon stilts." He became the most influential
of the utilitarians, through his own work
and that of his students. These included
his secretary and collaborator on the utilitarian
school of philosophy, James Mill; James Mill's
son John Stuart Mill; John Austin, legal
philosopher; and several political leaders,
including Robert Owen, a founder of modern
socialism. He is considered the godfather
of University College London (UCL).
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An Introduction to the Principles of Morals
and Legislation
Jeremy Bentham
(1748-1832)
Preface
P. 0 The following sheets were, as the note
on the opposite page expresses, printed so
long ago as the year 1780. The design, in
pursuance of which they were written, was
not so extensive as that announced by the
present title. They had at that time no other
destination than that of serving as an introduction
to a plan of a penal code in terminus, designed
to follow them, in the same volume.
P. 1 The body of the work had received its
completion according to the then present
extent of the author's views, when, in the
investigation of some flaws he had discovered,
he found himself unexpectedly entangled in
an unsuspected corner of the metaphysical
maze. A suspension, at first not apprehended
to be more than a temporary one, necessarily
ensued: suspension brought on coolness, and
coolness, aided by other concurrent causes,
ripened into disgust.
P. 2 Imperfections pervading the whole mass
had already been pointed out by the sincerity
of severe and discerning friends; and conscience
had certified the justness of their censure.
The inordinate length of some of the chapters,
the apparent inutility of others, and the
dry and metaphysical turn of the whole, suggested
an apprehension, that, if published in its
present form, the work would contend under
great disadvantages for any chance, it might
on other accounts possess, of being read,
and consequently of being of use.
P. 3 But, though in this manner the idea
of completing the present work slid insensibly
aside, that was not by any means the case
with the considerations which had led him
to engage in it. Every opening, which promised
to afford the lights he stood in need of,
was still pursued: as occasion arose the
several departments connected with that in
which he had at first engaged, were successively
explored; insomuch that, in one branch or
other of the pursuit, his researches have
nearly embraced the whole field of legislation.
P. 4 Several causes have conspired at present
to bring to light, under this new title,
a work which under its original one had been
imperceptibly, but as it had seemed irrevocably,
doomed to oblivion. In the course of eight
years, materials for various works, corresponding
to the different branches of the subject
of legislation, had been produced, and some
nearly reduced to shape: and, in every one
of those works, the principles exhibited
in the present publication had been found
so necessary, that, either to transcribe
them piece-meal, or to exhibit them somewhere
where they could be referred to in the lump,
was found unavoidable. The former course
would have occasioned repetitions too bulky
to be employed without necessity in the execution
of a plan unavoidably so voluminous: the
latter was therefore indisputably the preferable
one.
P. 5 To publish the materials in the form
in which they were already printed, or to
work them up into a new one, was therefore
the only alternative: the latter had all
along been his wish, and, had time and the
requisite degree of alacrity been at command,
it would as certainly have been realised.
Cogent considerations, however, concur, with
the irksomeness of the task, in placing the
accomplishment of it at present at an unfathomable
distance.
P. 6 Another consideration is, that the suppression
of the present work, had it been ever so
decidedly wished, is no longer altogether
in his power. In the course of so long an
interval, various incidents have introduced
copies into various hands, from some of which
they have been transferred by deaths and
other accidents, into others that are unknown
to him. Detached, but considerable extracts,
have even been published, without any dishonourable
views (for the name of the author was very
honestly subjoined to them), but without
his privity, and in publications undertaken
without his knowledge.
P. 7 It may perhaps be necessary to add,
to complete his excuse for offering to the
public a work pervaded by blemishes, which
have not escaped even the author's partial
eye, that the censure, so justly bestowed
upon the form, did not extend itself to the
matter.
P. 8 In sending it thus abroad into the world
with all its imperfections upon its head,
he thinks it may be of assistance to the
few readers he can expect, to receive a short
intimation of the chief particulars, in respect
of which it fails of corresponding with his
maturer views. It will thence be observed
how in some respects it fails of quadrating
with the design announced by its original
title, as in others it does with that announced
by the one it bears at present.
P. 9 An introduction to a work which takes
for its subject the totality of any science,
ought to contain all such matters, and such
matters only, as belong in common to every
particular branch of that science, or at
least to more branches of it than one. Compared
with its present title, the present work
fails in both ways of being conformable to
that rule.
P. 10 As an introduction to the principles
of morals, in addition to the analysis it
contains of the extensive ideas signified
by the terms pleasure, pain, motive, and
disposition, it ought to have given a similar
analysis of the not less extensive, though
much less determinate, ideas annexed to the
terms emotion, passion, appetite, virtue,
vice, and some others, including the names
of the particular virtues and vices. But
as the true, and, if he conceives right,
the only true ground-work for the development
of the latter set of terms, has been laid
by the explanation of the former, the completion
of such a dictionary, so to style it, would,
in comparison of the commencement, be little
more than a mechanical operation.
P. 11 Again, as an introduction to the principles
of legislation in general, it ought rather
to have included matters belonging exclusively
to the civil branch, than matters more particularly
applicable to the penal: the latter being
but a means of compassing the ends proposed
by the former. In preference therefore, or
at least in priority, to the several chapters
which will be found relative to punishment,
it ought to have exhibited a set of propositions
which have since presented themselves to
him as affording a standard for the operations
performed by government, in the creation
and distribution of proprietary and other
civil rights. He means certain axioms of
what may be termed mental pathology, expressive
of the connection betwixt the feelings of
the parties concerned, and the several classes
of incidents, which either call for, or are
produced by, operations of the nature above
mentioned.*1
P. 12 The consideration of the division of
offences, and every thing else that belongs
to offences, ought, besides, to have preceded
the consideration of punishment: for the
idea of punishment presupposes the idea of
offence: punishment, as such, not being inflicted
but in consideration of offence.
P. 13 Lastly, the analytical discussions
relative to the classification of offences
would, according to his present views, be
transferred to a separate treatise, in which
the system of legislation is considered solely
in respect of its form: in other words, in
respect of its method and terminology.
P. 14 In these respects the performance fails
of coming up to the author's own ideas of
what should have been exhibited in a work,
bearing the title he has now given it. viz.
that of an Introduction to the Principles
of Morals and Legislation. He knows however
of no other that would be less unsuitable:
nor in particular would so adequate an intimation
of its actual contents have been given, by
a title corresponding to the more limited
design, with which it was written: viz. that
of serving as an introduction to a penal
code.
P. 15 Yet more. Dry and tedious as a great
part of the discussions it contains must
unavoidably be found by the bulk of readers,
he knows not how to regret the having written
them, nor even the having made them public.
Under every head, the practical uses, to
which the discussions contained under that
head appeared applicable, are indicated:
nor is there, he believes, a single proposition
that he has not found occasion to build upon
in the penning of some article or other of
those provisions of detail, of which a body
of law, authoritative or unauthoritative,
must be composed. He will venture to specify
particularly, in this view, the several chapters
shortly characterized by the words Sensibility,
Actions, Intentionality, Consciousness, Motives,
Dispositions, Consequences. Even in the enormous
chapter on the division of offenses, which,
notwithstanding the forced compression the
plan has undergone in several of its parts,
in manner there mentioned, occupies no fewer
than one hundred and four closely printed
quarto pages,*2 the ten concluding ones are
employed in a statement of the practical
advantages that may be reaped from the plan
of classification which it exhibits. Those
in whose sight the Defence of Usury has been
fortunate enough to find favour, may reckon
as one instance of those advantages the discovery
of the principles developed in that little
treatise. In the preface to an anonymous
tract published so long ago as in 1776,*3
he had hinted at the utility of a natural
classification of offenses, in the character
of a test for distinguishing genuine from
spurious ones. The case of usury is one among
a number of instances of the truth of that
observation. A note at the end of Sect. XXXV.
chap. XVI. of the present publication, may
serve to show how the opinions, developed
in that tract, owed their origin to the difficulty
experienced in the attempt to find a place
in his system for that imaginary offense.
To some readers, as a means of helping them
to support the fatigue of wading through
an analysis of such enormous length, he would
almost recommend the beginning with those
ten concluding pages.
P. 16 One good at least may result from the
present publication; viz. that the more he
has trespassed on the patience of the reader
on this occasion, the less need he will have
so to do on future ones: so that this may
do to those, the office which is done, by
books of pure mathematics, to books of mixed
mathematics and natural philosophy. The narrower
the circle of readers is, within which the
present work may be condemned to confine
itself, the less limited may be the number
of those to whom the fruits of his succeeding
labours may be found accessible. He may therefore
in this respect find himself in the condition
of those philosophers of antiquity, who are
represented as having held two bodies of
doctrine, a popular and an occult one: but,
with this difference, that in his instance
the occult and the popular will, he hopes,
be found as consistent as in those they were
contradictory; and that in his production
whatever there is of occultness has been
the pure result of sad necessity, and in
no respect of choice.
P. 17 Having, in the course of this advertisement,
had such frequent occasion to allude to different
arrangements, as having been suggested by
more extensive and maturer views, it may
perhaps contribute to the satisfaction of
the reader, to receive a short intimation
of their nature: the rather, as, without
such explanation, references, made here and
there to unpublished works, might be productive
of perplexity and mistake. The following
then are the titles of the works by the publication
of which his present designs would be completed.
They are exhibited in the order which seemed
to him best fitted for apprehension, and
in which they would stand disposed, were
the whole assemblage ready to come out at
once: but the order, in which they will eventually
appear, may probably enough be influenced
in some degree by collateral and temporary
considerations.
P. 18 Part the 1st. Principles of legislation
in matters of civil, more distinctively termed
private distributive, or for shortness, distributive,
law.
P. 19 Part the 2nd. Principles of legislation
in matters of penal law.
P. 20 Part the 3rd. Principles of legislation
in matters of procedure: uniting in one view
the criminal and civil branches, between
which no line can be drawn, but a very indistinct
one, and that continually liable to variation.
P. 21 Part the 4th. Principles of legislation
in matters of reward.
P. 22 Part the 5th. Principles of legislation
in matters of public distributive, more concisely
as well as familiarly termed constitutional,
law.
P. 23 Part the 6th. Principles of legislation
in matters of political tactics: or of the
art of maintaining order in the proceedings
of political assemblies, so as to direct
them to the end of their institution: viz.
by a system of rules, which are to the constitutional
branch, in some respects, what the law of
procedure is to the civil and the penal.
P. 24 Part the 7th. Principles of legislation
in matters betwixt nation and nation, or,
to use a new though not inexpressive appellation,
in matters of international law.
P. 25 Part the 8th. Principles of legislation
in matters of finance.
P. 26 Part the 9th. Principles of legislation
in matters of political economy.
P. 27 Part the 10th. Plan of a body of law,
complete in all its branches, considered
in respect of its form; in other words, in
respect of its method and terminology; including
a view of the origination and connexion of
the ideas expressed by the short list of
terms, the exposition of which contains all
that can be said with propriety to belong
to the head of universal jurisprudence.*4
P. 28 The use of the principles laid down
under the above several heads is to prepare
the way for the body of law itself exhibited
in terminis; and which to be complete, with
reference to any political state, must consequently
be calculated for the meridian, and adapted
to the circumstances, of some one such state
in particular.
P. 29 Had he an unlimited power of drawing
upon time, and every other condition necessary,
it would be his wish to postpone the publication
of each part to the completion of the whole.
In particular, the use of the ten parts,
which exhibit what appear to him the dictates
of utility in every line, being no other
than to furnish reasons for the several corresponding
provisions contained in the body of law itself,
the exact truth of the former can never be
precisely ascertained, till the provisions,
to which they are destined to apply, are
themselves ascertained, and that in terminis.
But as the infirmity of human nature renders
all plans precarious in the execution, in
proportion as they are extensive in the design,
and as he has already made considerable advances
in several branches of the theory, without
having made correspondent advances in the
practical applications, he deems it more
than probable, that the eventual order of
publication will not correspond exactly with
that which, had it been equally practicable,
would have appeared most eligible. Of this
irregularity the unavoidable result will
be, a multitude of imperfections, which,
if the execution of the body of law in terminis
had kept pace with the development of the
principles, so that each part had been adjusted
and corrected by the other, might have been
avoided. His conduct however will be the
less swayed by this inconvenience, from his
suspecting it to be of the number of those
in which the personal vanity of the author
is much more concerned, than the instruction
of the public: since whatever amendments
may be suggested in the detail of the principles,
by the literal fixation of the provisions
to which they are relative, may easily be
made in a corrected edition of the former,
succeeding upon the publication of the latter.
P. 30 In the course of the ensuing pages,
references will be found, as already intimated,
some to the plan of a penal code to which
this work was meant as an introduction, some
to other branches of the above- mentioned
general plan, under titles somewhat different
from those, by which they have been mentioned
here. The giving this warning is all which
it is in the author's power to do, to save
the reader from the perplexity of looking
out for what has not as yet any existence.
The recollection of the change of plan will
in like manner account for several similar
incongruities not worth particularizing.
P. 31 Allusion was made, at the outset of
this advertisement, to some unspecified difficulties,
as the causes of the original suspension,
and unfinished complexion, of the present
work. Ashamed of his defeat, and unable to
dissemble it, he knows not how to reface
himself the benefit of such an apology as
a slight sketch of the nature of those difficulties
may afford.
P. 32 The discovery of them was produced
by the attempt to solve the questions that
will be found at the conclusion of the volume:
Wherein consisted the identity and completeness
of a law? What the distinction, and where
the separation, between a penal and a civil
law? What the distinction, and where the
separation, between the penal and other branches
of the law?
P. 33 To give a complete and correct answer
to these questions, it is but too evident
that the relations and dependencies of every
part of the legislative system, with respect
to every other, must have been comprehended
and ascertained. But it is only upon a view
of these parts themselves, that such an operation
could have been performed. To the accuracy
of such a survey one necessary condition
would therefore be, the complete existence
of the fabric to be surveyed. To the performance
of this condition no example is as yet to
be met with any where. Common law, as it
styles itself in England, judiciary law as
it might aptly be styled every where, that
fictitious composition which has no known
person for its author, no known assemblage
of words for its substance, forms every where
the main body of the legal fabric: like that
fancied ether, which, in default of sensible
matter, fills up the measure of the universe.
Shreds and scraps of real law, stuck on upon
that imaginary ground, compose the furniture
of every national code. What follows?-that
he who, for the purpose just mentioned or
for any other, wants an example of a complete
body of law to refer to, must begin with
making one.
P. 34 There is, or rather there ought to
be a logic of the will, as well as of the
understanding: the operations of the former
faculty, are neither less susceptible, nor
less worthy, then those of the latter, of
being delineated by rules. Of these two branches
of that recondite art, Aristotle saw only
the latter: succeeding logicians, treading
in the steps of their great founder, have
concurred in seeing with no other eyes. Yet
so far as a difference can be assigned between
branches so intimately connected, whatever
difference there is, in point of importance,
is in favour of the logic of the will. Since
it is only by their capacity of directing
the operations of this faculty, that the
operations of the understanding are of any
consequence.
P. 35 Of this logic of the will, the science
of law, considered in respect of its form,
is the most considerable branch,-the most
important application. It is, to the art
of legislation, what the science of anatomy
is to the art of medicine: with this difference,
that the subject of it is what the artist
has to work with, instead of being what he
has to operate upon. Nor is the body politic
less in danger from a want of acquaintance
with the one science, than the body natural
from ignorance in the other. One example,
amongst a thousand that might be adduced
in proof of this assertion, may be seen in
the note which terminates this volume.
P. 36 Such then were the difficulties: such
the preliminaries:-an unexampled work to
achieve, and then a new science to create:
a new branch to add to one of the most abstruse
of sciences.
P. 37 Yet more: a body of proposed law, how
complete soever, would be comparatively useless
and uninstructive, unless explained and justified,
and that in every tittle, by a continued
accompaniment, a perpetual commentary of
reasons:*5 which reasons, that the comparative
value of such as point in opposite directions
may be estimated, and the conjunct force,
of such as point in the same direction may
be felt, must be marshalled, and put under
subordination to such extensive and leading
ones as are termed principles. There must
be therefore, not one system only, but two
parallel and connected systems, running on
together. the one of legislative provisions,
the other of political reasons, each affording
to the other correction and support.
P. 38 Are enterprises like these achievable?
He knows not. This only he knows, that they
have been undertaken, proceeded in, and that
some progress has been made in all of them.
He will venture to add, if at all achievable,
never at least by one, to whom the fatigue
of attending to discussions, as arid as those
which occupy the ensuing pages, would either
appear useless, or feel intolerable. He will
repeat it boldly
(for it has been said before him), truths
that form the basis of political and moral
science are not to be discovered but by investigations
as severe as mathematical ones, and beyond
all comparison more intricate and extensive.
The familiarity of the terms is a presumption,
but is a most fallacious one, of the facility
of the matter. Truths in general have been
called stubborn things: the truths just mentioned
are so in their own way. They are not to
be forced into detached and general propositions,
unincumbered with explanations and exceptions.
They will not compress themselves into epigrams.
They recoil from the tongue and the pen of
the declaimer. They flourish not in the same
soil with sentiment. They grow among thorns;
and are not to be plucked, like daisies,
by infants as they run. Labour, the inevitable
lot of humanity, is in no track more inevitable
than here. In vain would an Alexander bespeak
a peculiar road for royal vanity, or a Ptolemy,
a smoother one, for royal indolence. There
is no King's Road, no Stadtholder's Gate,
to legislative, any more than to mathematic
science.
Chapter I
OF THE PRINCIPLE OF UTILITY
I. 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*6
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.
I. 1 But enough of metaphor and declamation:
it is not by such means that moral science
is to be improved.
I. 2 II. 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*7 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.
I. 3 III. 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.
I. 4 IV. 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?-the sum of the interests
of the several members who compose it.
I. 5 V. It is in vain to talk of the interest
of the community, without understanding what
is the interest of the individual.*8 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.
I. 6 VI. An action then may be said to be
conformable to the 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.
I. 7 VII. 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.
I. 8 VIII. When an action, or in particular
a measure of government, is supposed by a
man to be conformable to the principle of
utility, it may be convenient, for the purposes
of discourse, to imagine a kind of law or
dictate, called a law or dictate of utility:
and to speak of the action in question, as
being conformable to such law or dictate.
I. 9 IX. A man may be said to be a partizan
of the principle of utility, when the approbation
or disapprobation he annexes to any action,
or to any measure, is determined by and proportioned
to the tendency which he conceives it to
have to augment or to diminish the happiness
of the community: or in other words, to its
conformity or unconformity to the laws or
dictates of utility.
I. 10 X. 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.
I. 11 XI. Has the rectitude of this principle
been ever formally contested? It should seem
that it had, by those who have not known
what they have been meaning. Is it susceptible
of any direct proof? it should seem not:
for that which is used to prove every thing
else, cannot itself be proved: a chain of
proofs must have their commencement somewhere.
To give such proof is as impossible as it
is needless.
I. 12 XII. Not that there is or ever has
been that human creature at breathing, however
stupid or perverse, who has not on many,
perhaps on most occasions of his life, deferred
to it. By the natural constitution of the
human frame, on most occasions of their lives
men in general embrace this principle, without
thinking of it: if not for the ordering of
their own actions, yet for the trying of
their own actions, as well as of those of
other men. There have been, at the same time,
not many perhaps, even of the most intelligent,
who have been disposed to embrace it purely
and without reserve. There are even few who
have not taken some occasion or other to
quarrel with it, either on account of their
not understanding always how to apply it,
or on account of some prejudice or other
which they were afraid to examine into, or
could not bear to part with. For such is
the stuff that man is made of: in principle
and in practice, in a right track and in
a wrong one, the rarest of all human qualities
is consistency.
I. 13 XIII. When a man attempts to combat
the principle of utility, it is with reasons
drawn, without his being aware of it, from
that very principle itself.*9 His arguments,
if they prove any thing, prove not that the
principle is wrong, but that, according to
the applications he supposes to be made of
it, it is misapplied. Is it possible for
a man to move the earth? Yes; but he must
first find out another earth to stand upon.
I. 14 XIV. To disprove the propriety of it
by arguments is impossible; but, from the
causes that have been mentioned, or from
some confused or partial view of it, a man
may happen to be disposed not to relish it.
Where this is the case, if he thinks the
settling of his opinions on such a subject
worth the trouble, let him take the following
steps, and at length, perhaps, he may come
to reconcile himself to it.
I. 15
1. Let him settle with himself, whether he
would wish to discard this principle altogether;
if so, let him consider what it is that all
his reasonings (in matters of politics especially)
can amount to?
I. 16
2. If he would, let him settle with himself,
whether he would judge and act without any
principle, or whether there is any other
he would judge an act by?
I. 17
3. If there be, let him examine and satisfy
himself whether the principle he thinks he
has found is really any separate intelligible
principle; or whether it be not a mere principle
in words, a kind of phrase, which at bottom
expresses neither more nor less than the
mere averment of his own unfounded sentiments;
that is, what in another person he might
be apt to call caprice?
I. 18
4. If he is inclined to think that his own
approbation or disapprobation, annexed to
the idea of an act, without any regard to
its consequences, is a sufficient foundation
for him to judge and act upon, let him ask
himself whether his sentiment is to be a
standard of right and wrong, with respect
to every other man, or whether every man's
sentiment has the same privilege of being
a standard to itself?
I. 19
5. In the first case, let him ask himself
whether his principle is not despotical,
and hostile to all the rest of human race?
I. 20
6. In the second case, whether it is not
anarchial, and whether at this rate there
are not as many different standards of right
and wrong as there are men? and whether even
to the same man, the same thing, which is
right to-day, may not (without the least
change in its nature) be wrong to-morrow?
and whether the same thing is not right and
wrong in the same place at the same time?
and in either case, whether all argument
is not at an end? and whether, when two men
have said, 'I like this', and 'I don't like
it', they can (upon such a principle) have
any thing more to say?
I. 21
7. If he should have said to himself, No:
for that the sentiment which he proposes
as a standard must be grounded on reflection,
let him say on what particulars the reflection
is to turn? if on particulars having relation
to the utility of the act, then let him say
whether this is not deserting his own principle,
and borrowing assistance from that very one
in opposition to which he sets it up: or
if not on those particulars, on what other
particulars?
I. 22
8. If he should be for compounding the matter,
and adopting his own principle in part, and
the principle of utility in part, let him
say how far he will adopt it?
I. 23
9. When he has settled with himself where
he will stop, then let him ask himself how
he justifies to himself the adopting it so
far? and why he will not adopt it any farther?
I. 24
10. Admitting any other principle than the
principle of utility to be a right principle,
a principle that it is right for a man to
pursue; admitting (what is not true) that
the word right can have a meaning without
reference to utility, let him say whether
there is any such thing as a motive that
a man can have to pursue the dictates of
it: if there is, let him say what that motive
is, and how it is to be distinguished from
those which enforce the dictates of utility:
if not, then lastly let him say what it is
this other principle can be good for?
Chapter II
OF PRINCIPLES ADVERSE TO THAT OF UTILITY
1. 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.
II. 1 II. A principle may be different from
that of utility in two ways: 1. By being
constantly opposed to it: this is the case
with a principle which may be termed the
principle of asceticism.*10 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.
II. 2 III. 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.
II. 3 IV. It is evident that any one who
reprobates any the least particle of pleasure,
as such, from whatever source derived, is
pro tanto a partizan of the principle of
asceticism. It is only upon that principle,
and not from the principle of utility, that
the most abominable pleasure which the vilest
of malefactors ever reaped from his crime
would be to be reprobated, if it stood alone.
The case is, that it never does stand alone;
but is necessarily followed by such a quantity
of pain (or, what comes to the same thing,
such a chance for a certain quantity of pain)
that the pleasure in comparison of it, is
as nothing: and this is the true and sole,
but perfectly sufficient, reason for making
it a ground for punishment.
II. 4 V. There are two classes of men of
very different complexions, by whom the principle
of asceticism appears to have been embraced;
the one a set of moralists, the other a set
of religionists. Different accordingly have
been the motives which appear to have recommended
it to the notice of these different parties.
Hope, that is the prospect of pleasure, seems
to have animated the former: hope, the aliment
of philosophic pride: the hope of honour
and reputation at the hands of men. Fear,
that is the prospect of pain, the latter:
fear, the offspring of superstitious fancy:
the fear of future punishment at the hands
of a splenetic and revengeful Deity. I say
in this case fear: for of the invisible future,
fear is more powerful than hope. These circumstances
characterize the two different parties among
the partisans of the principle of asceticism;
the parties and their motives different,
the principle the same.
II. 5 VI. The religious party, however, appear
to have carried it farther than the philosophical:
they have acted more consistently and less
wisely. The philosophical party have scarcely
gone farther than to reprobate pleasure:
the religious party have frequently gone
so far as to make it a matter of merit and
of duty to court pain. The philosophical
party have hardly gone farther than the making
pain a matter of indifference. It is no evil,
they have said: they have not said, it is
a good. They have not so much as reprobated
all pleasure in the lump. They have discarded
only what they have called the gross; that
is, such as are organical, or of which the
origin is easily traced up to such as are
organical: they have even cherished and magnified
the refined. Yet this, however, not under
the name of pleasure: to cleanse itself from
the sordes of its impure original, it was
necessary it should change its name: the
honourable, the glorious, the reputable,
the becoming, the honestum, the decorum it
was to be called: in short, any thing but
pleasure.
II. 6 VII. From these two sources have flowed
the doctrines from which the sentiments of
the bulk of mankind have all along received
a tincture of this principle; some from the
philosophical, some from the religious, some
from both. Men of education more frequently
from the philosophical, as more suited to
the elevation of their sentiments: the vulgar
more frequently from the superstitious, as
more suited to the narrowness of their intellect,
undilated by knowledge: and to the abjectness
of their condition, continually open to the
attacks of fear. The tinctures, however,
derived from the two sources, would naturally
intermingle, insomuch that a man would not
always know by which of them he was most
influenced: and they would often serve to
corroborate and enliven one another. It was
this conformity that made a kind of alliance
between parties of a complexion otherwise
so dissimilar: and disposed them to unite
upon various occasions against the common
enemy, the partizan of the principle of utility,
whom they joined in branding with the odious
name of Epicurean.
II. 7 VIII. The principle of asceticism,
however, with whatever warmth it may have
been embraced by its partizans as a rule
of private conduct, seems not to have been
carried to any considerable length, when
applied to the business of government. In
a few instances it has been carried a little
way by the philosophical party: witness the
Spartan regimen. Though then, perhaps, it
maybe considered as having been a measure
of security: and an application, though a
precipitate and perverse application, of
the principle of utility. Scarcely in any
instances, to any considerable length, by
the religious: for the various monastic orders,
and the societies of the Quakers, Dumplers,
Moravians, and other religionists, have been
free societies, whose regimen no man has
been astricted to without the intervention
of his own consent. Whatever merit a man
may have thought there would be in making
himself miserable, no such notion seems ever
to have occurred to any of them, that it
may be a merit, much less a duty, to make
others miserable: although it should seem,
that if a certain quantity of misery were
a thing so desirable, it would not matter
much whether it were brought by each man
upon himself, or by one man upon another.
It is true, that from the same source from
whence, among the religionists, the attachment
to the principle of asceticism took its rise,
flowed other doctrines and practices, from
which misery in abundance was produced in
one man by the instrumentality of another:
witness the holy wars, and the persecutions
for religion. But the passion for producing
misery in these cases proceeded upon some
special ground: the exercise of it was confined
to persons of particular descriptions: they
were tormented, not as men, but as heretics
and infidels. To have inflicted the same
miseries on their fellow believers and fellow-sectaries,
would have been as blameable in the eyes
even of these religionists, as in those of
a partizan of the principle of utility. For
a man to give himself a certain number of
stripes was indeed meritorious: but to give
the same number of stripes to another man,
not consenting, would have been a sin. We
read of saints, who for the good of their
souls, and the mortification of their bodies,
have voluntarily yielded themselves a prey
to vermin: but though many persons of this
class have wielded the reins of empire, we
read of none who have set themselves to work,
and made laws on purpose, with a view of
stocking the body politic with the breed
of highwaymen, housebreakers, or incendiaries.
If at any time they have suffered the nation
to be preyed upon by swarms of idle pensioners,
or useless placemen, it has rather been from
negligence and imbecility, than from any
settled plan for oppressing and plundering
of the people. If at any time they have sapped
the sources of national wealth, by cramping
commerce, and driving the inhabitants into
emigration, it has been with other views,
and in pursuit of other ends. If they have
declaimed against the pursuit of pleasure,
and the use of wealth, they have commonly
stopped at declamation: they have not, like
Lycurgus, made express ordinances for the
purpose of banishing the precious metals.
If they have established idleness by a law,
it has been not because idleness, the mother
of vice and misery, is itself a virtue, but
because idleness (say they) is the road to
holiness. If under the notion of fasting,
they have joined in the plan of confining
their subjects to a diet, thought by some
to be of the most nourishing and prolific
nature, it has been not for the sake of making
them tributaries to the nations by whom that
diet was to be supplied, but for the sake
of manifesting their own power, and exercising
the obedience of the people. If they have
established, or suffered to be established,
punishments for the breach of celibacy, they
have done no more than comply with the petitions
of those deluded rigorists, who, dupes to
the ambitious and deep-laid policy of their
rulers, first laid themselves under that
idle obligation by a vow.
II. 8 IX. 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.
II. 9 X. 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.
II. 10 XI. Among principles adverse*11 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.
II. 11 XII. 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.
II. 12 XIII. 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.
II. 13 XIV. 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 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 phrases different,
but the principle the same.*12
II. 14 XV. It is manifest, that the dictates
of this principle will frequently coincide
with those of utility, though perhaps without
intending any such thing. Probably more frequently
than not: and hence it is that the business
of penal justice is carried upon that tolerable
sort of footing upon which we see it carried
on in common at this day. For what more natural
or more general ground of hatred to a practice
can there be, than the mischievousness of
such practice? What all men are exposed to
suffer by, all men will be disposed to hate.
It is far yet, however, from being a constant
ground: for when a man suffers, it is not
always that he knows what it is he suffers
by. A man may suffer grievously, for instance,
by a new tax, without being able to trace
up the cause of his sufferings to the injustice
of some neighbour, who has eluded the payment
of an old one.
II. 15 XVI. The principle of sympathy and
antipathy is most apt to err on the side
of severity. It is for applying punishment
in many cases which deserve none: in many
cases which deserve some, it is for applying
more than they deserve. There is no incident
imaginable, be it ever so trivial, and so
remote from mischief, from which this principle
may not extract a ground of punishment. Any
difference in taste: any difference in opinion:
upon one subject as well as upon another.
No disagreement so trifling which perseverance
and altercation will not render serious.
Each becomes in the other's eyes an enemy,
and, if laws permit, a criminal.*13 This
is one of the circumstances by which the
human race is distinguished (not much indeed
to its advantage) from the brute creation.
II. 16 XVII. It is not, however, by any means
unexampled for this principle to err on the
side of lenity. A near and perceptible mischief
moves antipathy. A remote and imperceptible
mischief, though not less real, has no effect.
Instances in proof of this will occur in
numbers in the course of the work.*14 It
would be breaking in upon the order of it
to give them here.
II. 17 XVIII. It may be wondered, perhaps,
that in all this no mention has been made
of the theological principle; meaning that
principal which professes to recur for the
standard of right and wrong to the will of
God. But the case is, this is not in fact
a distinct principle. It is never any thing
more or less than one or other of the three
before-mentioned principles presenting itself
under another shape. The will of God here
meant cannot be his revealed will, as contained
in the sacred writings: for that is a system
which nobody ever thinks of recurring to
at this time of day, for the details of political
administration: and even before it can be
applied to the details of private conduct,
it is universally allowed, by the most eminent
divines of all persuasions, to stand in need
of pretty ample interpretations; else to
what use are the works of those divines?
And for the guidance of these interpretations,
it is also allowed, that some other standard
must be assumed. The will then which is meant
on this occasion, is that which may be called
the presumptive will: that is to say, that
which is presumed to be his will by virtue
of the conformity of its dictates to those
of some other principle. What then may be
this other principle? it must be one or other
of the three mentioned above: for there cannot,
as we have seen, be any more. It is plain,
therefore, that, setting revelation out of
the question, no light can ever be thrown
upon the standard of right and wrong, by
any thing that can be said upon the question,
what is God's will. We may be perfectly sure,
indeed, that whatever is right is conformable
to the will of God: but so far is that from
answering the purpose of showing us what
is right, that it is necessary to know first
whether a thing is right, in order to know
from thence whether it be conformable to
the will of God.*15
II. 18 XIX. There are two things which are
very apt to be confounded, but which it imports
us carefully to distinguish:-the motive or
cause, which, by operating on the mind of
an individual, is productive of any act:
and the ground or reason which warrants a
legislator, or other by-stander, in regarding
that act with an eye of approbation. When
the act happens, in the particular instance
in question, to be productive of effects
which we approve of, much more if we happen
to observe that the same motive may frequently
be productive, in other instances, of the
like effects, we are apt to transfer our
approbation to the motive itself, and to
assume, as the just ground for the approbation
we bestow on the act, the circumstance of
its originating from that motive. It is in
this way that the sentiment of antipathy
has often been considered as a just ground
of action. Antipathy, for instance, in such
or such a case, is the cause of an action
which is attended with good effects: but
this does not make it a right ground of action
in that case, any more than in any other.
Still farther. Not only the effects are good,
but the agent sees beforehand that they will
be so. This may make the action indeed a
perfectly right action: but it does not make
antipathy a right ground of action. For the
same sentiment of antipathy, if implicitly
deferred to, may be, and very frequently
is, productive of the very worst effects.
Antipathy, therefore, can never be a right
ground of action. No more, therefore, can
resentment, which, as will be seen more particularly
hereafter, is but a modification of antipathy.
The only right ground of action, that can
possibly subsist, is, after all, the consideration
of utility which, if it is a right principle
of action, and of approbation, in any one
case, is so in every other. Other principles
in abundance, that is, other motives, may
be the reasons why such and such an act has
been done: that is, the reasons or causes
of its being done: but it is this alone that
can be the reason why it might or ought to
have been done. Antipathy or resentment requires
always to be regulated, to prevent its doing
mischief: to be regulated by what? always
by the principle of utility. The principle
of utility neither requires nor admits of
any another regulator than itself.
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