Mill's most famous departure from Bentham is his distinction between higher and lower pleasures. This article argues that quality and quantity are independent and irreducible properties of pleasures that may be traded off against each other – as in the case of quality and quantity of wine. I argue that Mill is not committed to thinking that there are two distinct kinds of pleasure, or that ‘higher pleasures’ lexically dominate lower ones, and that the distinction is compatible with hedonism. I show how this interpretation not only makes sense of Mill but allows him to respond to famous problems, such as Crisp's Haydn and the oyster and Nozick's experience machine
This paper suggests an alternative view to the usual interpretation of Bentham's psychological theor...
This paper discusses J.S. Mill’s distinction between higher and lower pleasures, and suggests that r...
It may seem obvious that happiness is valuable, but is it the only thing valuable for its own sake, ...
Mill’s most famous departure from Bentham is his distinction between higher and lower pleasures. Thi...
One of Mill's most radical departures from Bentham is his qualitative hedonism. The distinction betw...
John Stuart Mill claims that there are higher and lower pleasures. Although this claim is an essenti...
John Stuart Mill’s treatise, Utilitarianism, takes the standard concept of utilitarianism, and tries...
Two recent critics of Mill’s qualitative hedonism, Michael Hauskeller and Kristin Schaupp, argue tha...
John Stuart Mill and Jeremy Bentham are often said to have held opposed views concerning t...
John Stuart Mill and Jeremy Bentham are often said to have held opposed views concerning the way “th...
Philosophical thinking about pleasure today, especially in the context of normative ethics, is deepl...
The passage of Mill’s Utilitarianism that sets out the condition in which one pleasure has a superio...
In this paper, I will critically examine David Brink’s claim that Mill is not a hedonist, and argue ...
Journal ArticleThe intended contribution to his moral theory of John Stuart Mill's famous distinctio...
The purpose of this paper is to show that our feelings and moral sentiments play an important part i...
This paper suggests an alternative view to the usual interpretation of Bentham's psychological theor...
This paper discusses J.S. Mill’s distinction between higher and lower pleasures, and suggests that r...
It may seem obvious that happiness is valuable, but is it the only thing valuable for its own sake, ...
Mill’s most famous departure from Bentham is his distinction between higher and lower pleasures. Thi...
One of Mill's most radical departures from Bentham is his qualitative hedonism. The distinction betw...
John Stuart Mill claims that there are higher and lower pleasures. Although this claim is an essenti...
John Stuart Mill’s treatise, Utilitarianism, takes the standard concept of utilitarianism, and tries...
Two recent critics of Mill’s qualitative hedonism, Michael Hauskeller and Kristin Schaupp, argue tha...
John Stuart Mill and Jeremy Bentham are often said to have held opposed views concerning t...
John Stuart Mill and Jeremy Bentham are often said to have held opposed views concerning the way “th...
Philosophical thinking about pleasure today, especially in the context of normative ethics, is deepl...
The passage of Mill’s Utilitarianism that sets out the condition in which one pleasure has a superio...
In this paper, I will critically examine David Brink’s claim that Mill is not a hedonist, and argue ...
Journal ArticleThe intended contribution to his moral theory of John Stuart Mill's famous distinctio...
The purpose of this paper is to show that our feelings and moral sentiments play an important part i...
This paper suggests an alternative view to the usual interpretation of Bentham's psychological theor...
This paper discusses J.S. Mill’s distinction between higher and lower pleasures, and suggests that r...
It may seem obvious that happiness is valuable, but is it the only thing valuable for its own sake, ...