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The Utilitarianism series
part of the Politics series
Utilitarian Thinkers
Forms
Predecessors
Key concepts
Problems
See also
Portal: Politics

Act Utilitarianism is a utilitarian theory of ethics which states that the right action is the one which produces the greatest amount of happiness or pleasure for the greatest number of beings. Act utilitarianism is opposed to rule utilitarianism, which states that the morally right action is the one that is in accordance with a moral rule whose general observance would create the most happiness. Act utilitarianism will use the summary concept as opposed to the practice concept. The summary concept means that the rule is a generalization that a class of actions, such as the keeping of promises, is good. However that is only to be used as a guideline for what is usually right and it doesn't mean that it is always best to keep promises. That being said it does not always cause the greatest good to the greatest amount of people to keep promises.

"An act is right from an ethical point of view if, and only if, the sum total of utilities produced by that act is greater than the sum total utilities produced by another act the agent could have performed in its place." (Jeremy Bentham)[citation needed]


[edit] Utilitarianism

Utilitarianism is a consequentialist theory, which means that it stipulates that the morality of an action is determined by its outcome. (This is opposed to deontology, which argues that moral actions should flow from duties or motives.) This consequentialism is then combined with hedonism, which posits happiness or pleasure as the ultimate worthwhile pursuit. Therefore, since only the consequences of an action matter, and only happiness matters, the action is the one that results in the greatest sum of happiness.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes




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