Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Utilitarianism and beyond
- 1 Ethical theory and utilitarianism
- 2 Morality and the theory of rational behaviour
- 3 The economic uses of utilitarianism
- 4 Utilitarianism, uncertainty and information
- 5 Contractualism and utilitarianism
- 6 The diversity of goods
- 7 Morality and convention
- 8 Social unity and primary goods
- 9 On some difficulties of the utilitarian economist
- 10 Utilitarianism, information and rights
- 11 Sour grapes – utilitarianism and the genesis of wants
- 12 Liberty and welfare
- 13 Under which descriptions?
- 14 What's the use of going to school?
- Bibliography
5 - Contractualism and utilitarianism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Utilitarianism and beyond
- 1 Ethical theory and utilitarianism
- 2 Morality and the theory of rational behaviour
- 3 The economic uses of utilitarianism
- 4 Utilitarianism, uncertainty and information
- 5 Contractualism and utilitarianism
- 6 The diversity of goods
- 7 Morality and convention
- 8 Social unity and primary goods
- 9 On some difficulties of the utilitarian economist
- 10 Utilitarianism, information and rights
- 11 Sour grapes – utilitarianism and the genesis of wants
- 12 Liberty and welfare
- 13 Under which descriptions?
- 14 What's the use of going to school?
- Bibliography
Summary
Utilitarianism occupies a central place in the moral philosophy of our time. It is not the view which most people hold; certainly there are very few who would claim to be act utilitarians. But for a much wider range of people it is the view towards which they find themselves pressed when they try to give a theoretical account of their moral beliefs. Within moral philosophy it represents a position one must struggle against if one wishes to avoid it. This is so in spite of the fact that the implications of act utilitarianism are wildly at variance with firmly held moral convictions, while rule utilitarianism, the most common alternative formulation, strikes most people as an unstable compromise.
The wide appeal of utilitarianism is due, I think, to philosophical considerations of a more or less sophisticated kind which pull us in a quite different direction than our first order moral beliefs. In particular, utilitarianism derives much of its appeal from alleged difficulties about the foundations of rival views. What a successful alternative to utilitarianism must do, first and foremost, is to sap this source of strength by providing a clear account of the foundations of non-utilitarian moral reasoning. In what follows I will first describe the problem in more detail by setting out the questions which a philosophical account of the foundations of morality must answer. I will then put forward a version of contractualism which, I will argue, offers a better set of responses to these questions than that supplied by straightforward versions of utilitarianism. Finally I will explain why contractualism, as I understand it, does not lead back to some utilitarian formula as its normative outcome.
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- Utilitarianism and Beyond , pp. 103 - 128Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1982
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