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Glyn Hughes'
Squashed Philosophers The
Condensed Edition of "Mankind is governed by pain and pleasure" |
INTRODUCTION
In London on the 15th
February 1748, Jeremy Bentham was born to into a wealthy
ambitious Tory family. Expected to succeed as a lawyer, Jeremy
got into Oxford University at the age of 12, gained his MA at 13
and began training as a barrister aged 15. Disillusioned with the
chicanery of legal practice he soon retired to Westminster,
where, for nearly forty years, (barring a coupe spent in Russia)
even in his eighties, he churned out ten to twenty manuscripts a
day commenting on the laws on proposing new ones. He denounced
Blackstone's revered 'Commentaries on the Laws of England' for
its obsession with the unyielding "rule of law" and
proposed a circular 'panopticon' design for prisons. And in
between all that he came across the phrase "the greatest
happiness to the greatest number" in the Italian jurist
Beccaria's book 'Crimes and Punishments' and made this 'principle
of utility' into both an ethical formula and a rallying-cry.
THE
VERY SQUASHED VERSION
Mankind is
governed by pain and pleasure. Utility is that property which
tends to produce happiness. The principle of utility makes
utility the criterion for approval or disapproval of every kind
of action. The legislator must be able to guage the value of
pleasure and pain. These depend on intensity, duration, certainty
or uncertainty, propinquity or remoteness; on the probable
multiplication of like sensations; and on the number of persons
pleasurably or painfully affected. All these being weighed
together, if the pleasurable tendency predominates, the act is
good; if the painful, bad. The business of government is to
promote the happiness of society by rewarding and punishing,
especially by punishing acts tending to diminish happiness. Hence
with regard to each action we have to consider its circumstances,
the intention, motive and the consequences. Punishment, being
primarily mischievous, is out of place when groundless,
inefficacious, unprofitable, or needless. Punishment is
inefficacious when it is ex post facto, or extra-legal, or
secret; in the case of irresponsible (including intoxicated)
persons; and also so far as the intention of the act was
incomplete, or where the act was under compulsion. It is
unprofitable when the evils of the punishment outweigh the
offence. It is needless when the end can be attained otherwise.
Punishment must outweigh the profit of the offence to the doer;
(2) the greater the mischief, the greater the expense worth
incurring to prevent it; (3) alternative offences which are not
equally mischievous, must not be equally punished; (4) the
punishment must not be excessive. An offence - a punishable act -
is constituted such by the community; though it ought not to be
an offence unless contrary to utility, it may be so. Those cases
described as unmeet for punishment are all within the realm of
personal ethics, but outside the legislative sphere.
THIS
SQUASHED VERSION
This
condensed edition is abridged and paraphrased from the original
142133 words.
Introduction
to the
Principles
of Morals and Legislation
by
Jeremy Bentham, 1789
Squashed
version edited by Glyn Hughes © 2000
MANKIND is governed by pain and pleasure. Utility is that
property in anything which tends to produce happiness in the
party concerned, whether an individual or a community. The
principle of utility makes utility the criterion for approval or
disapproval of every kind of action. An act which conforms to
this principle is one which ought to be done, or is not one which
ought not to be done; is right, or, at least, not wrong. There is
no other criterion possible which cannot ultimately be reduced to
the personal sentiment of the individual.
The sources or sanctions of pleasure and pain are four - the
physical, in the ordinary course of nature; political, officially
imposed; moral or popular, imposed by public opinion; and
religion. Pains under the first head are calamities; under the
other three are punishments. Under the first three heads they
concern the present life only. The second, third and the fourth,
as concerns this life, operate through the first; but the first
operates independently of the others.
Pleasures and pains, then, are the instruments with which the
legislator has to work; he must, therefore, be able to gauge
their relative values. These depend primarily and simply on four
things - intensity, duration, certainty or uncertainty,
propinquity or remoteness. Secondarily, on fecundity, the
consequent probable multiplication of the like sensations; and
purity, the improbability of consequent contrary sensations.
Finally, on extent - the number of persons pleasurably or
painfully affected. All these being weighed together, if the
pleasurable tendency predominates, the act is good; if the
painful, bad.
Pleasures and pains are either simple or complex - i.e.,
resolvable into several simple pleasures, and may be enumerated;
as those of the senses, of wealth, of piety, of benevolence, of
malevolence, of association, of imagination. Different persons
are sensible to the same pleasure in different degrees, and the
sensibility of the individual varies under different
circumstances. Circumstances affecting sensibility are various -
such as health, strength, sex, age, education; they may be
circumstances of the body, of the mind, of the inclinations.
Their influence can be reckoned approximately, but should be
taken into consideration so far as is practicable.
The legislator and the judge are concerned with the existing
causes of pleasure and pain, but of pain rather than pleasure -
the mischiefs which it is desired to prevent, and the punishments
by which it is sought to prevent them - and for the due
apportionment of the latter they should have before them the
complete list of punishments and of circumstances affecting
sensibility. By taking the two together - with one list or the
other for basis, preferably the punishment list - a
classification of appropriate penalties is attainable.
An analytical summary of the circumstances affecting sensibility
will distinguish as secondary - i.e. as acting not immediately
but mediately through the primary - sex, age, station in life,
education, climate, religion. The others, all primary, are
connate - viz. radical frame of mind and body - or adventitious.
The adventitious are personal or exterior. The personal concern a
man's disposition of body or mind, or his actions; exterior, the
things or persons he is concerned with.
The business of government is to promote the happiness of society
by rewarding and punishing, especially by punishing acts tending
to diminish happiness. An act demands punishment in proportion to
its tendency to diminish happiness - i.e. as the sum of its
consequences does so. Only such consequences are referred to as
influence the production of pain or pleasure. The intention, as
involving other consequences, must also be taken into
consideration. And the intention depends on the state of the will
and of the understanding as to the circumstances - consciousness,
unconsciousness, or false consciousness of them.
Hence with regard to each action we have to consider
(1) the act itself,
(2) the circumstances,
(3) the intentionality,
(4) the attendant consciousness, and also
(5) the motive, and
(6) the general disposition indicated.
Acts are positive and negative - i.e. of commission and omission,
or forbearance; external or corporal, and internal or mental;
transitive, affecting some body other than the agent's, or
intransitive; transient or continued (mere repetition is not the
same as habit). Circumstances are material when visibly related
to the consequences in point of causality, directly or
indirectly. They may be criminative, or exculpative, or
aggravative, or evidential.
The intention may regard the act itself only, or its consequence
also - for instance, you may touch a man intentionally and by
doing so cause his death unintentionally. But you cannot intend
the consequences - though you may desire them - without intending
the action. The consequences may be intended directly or
indirectly, and may or may not be the only thing intended. The
intention is good or bad as the consequences intended are good or
bad.
But these actually depend on the circumstances which are
independent of the intention; here the important point is the
man's consciousness of the circumstances, which are objects not
of the will, but of the understanding. If he is conscious of the
circumstances and of their materiality, the act is advised; if
not, unadvised. Unadvisedness may be due either to heedlessness
or to misapprehension.
And here we may remark that we may speak of a bad intention,
though the motive was good, if the consequences intended were
bad, and vice versa. In this sense also, the intention may be
innocent - that is, not bad, without being positively good.
Of motives, we are concerned with practical motives only, not
those which are purely speculative. Those are either internal or
external; either events in esse, or events in prospect. The
immediate motive is an internal motive in esse- -an awakened
pleasure or pain at the prospect of pleasure or pain. All others
are comparatively remote.
Now, since the motive is always primarily to produce some
pleasure or prevent some pain, and since pleasure is identical
with good and pain with evil, it follows that no motive is in
itself bad. The motive is good if it tends to produce a balance
of pleasure; bad, if a balance of pain. Thus any and every motive
may produce actions good, indifferent, or bad. Hence, in
cataloguing motives, we must employ only neutral terms, i.e. not
such as are associated with goodness - as piety, honour - or with
badness - as lust, avarice.
The motives, of course, correspond to the various pleasures as
previously enumerated. They may be classified as good, bad, or
indifferent according as their consequences are more commonly
good, bad, or indifferent; but the dangers of such classification
are obvious. In fact, we cannot affirm goodness, badness, or
indifference of motive, except in the particular instance.
A better classification is into the social - including good will,
love of reputation, desire of amity, religion; dissocial -
displeasure; self-regarding - physical desire, pecuniary
interest, love of power, self-preservation.
Of all these, the dictates of good will are the surest of
coinciding with utility, since utility corresponds precisely to
the widest and best-advised good will. Even here, however, there
may be failure, since benevolence towards one group may clash
with benevolence towards another. Next stands love of reputation,
which is less secure, since it may lead to asceticism and to
hypocrisy. Third comes the desire of amity, valuable as the
sphere in which amity is sought is extended, but also liable to
breed insincerity. Religion would stand first of all if we all
had a correct perception of the divine goodness; but not when we
conceive of God as malevolent or capricious; and, as a matter of
fact, our conception of the Deity is controlled by our personal
biases.
THE self-regarding motives are, ex hypothesi, not so closely
related to utility as the social motives, and the dissocial
motives manifestly stand at the bottom of the scale. In respect
to any particular action there may be a conflict of motives, some
impelling towards it, others restraining from it; and any motive
may come in conflict with any other motive.
It will be found hereafter that in the case of some offences the
motive is material in the highest degree, and in others wholly
immaterial; in some cases easy, and in others impossible to
gauge.
Goodness or badness, then, cannot be predicated of the motive.
What is good or bad in the man when actuated by one motive or
another is his disposition, or permanent attitude of mind, which
is good or bad as tending to produce effects beneficial to the
community. It is to be considered in regard to its influence on
(1) his own happiness; (2) other people's. The legislator is
concerned with it so far as it is mischievous to others. A man is
held to be of a mischievous disposition when it is presumed that
he inclines to acts which appear to him mischievous. Here it is
that 'intentionality' and 'consciousness' come in.
Where the tendency of the act is good and the motive is a social
one, a good disposition is indicated; where the tendency is bad
and the motive is self- regarding, a bad disposition is
indicated. Otherwise, the indication of good or bad disposition
may be very dubious or non-existent. Now, our problem is to
measure the depravity of a man's disposition, which may be
defined as the sum of his intentions. The causes of intentions
are motives. The social motives may be called tutelary, as
tending to restrain from mischievous intentions; but any motive
may become tutelary on occasion. Love of ease, and desire of
self- preservation, in the form of fear of punishment, are apt to
be tutelary motives.
Now we can see that the strength of a temptation equals the sum
of the impelling motives, minus the sum of the tutelary motives.
Hence, the more susceptible a man is to the standing tutelary
motives, the less likely is he to yield to temptation; in other
words, the less depraved is his disposition. Hence, given the
strength of the temptation, the mischievousness of the
disposition is as the apparent mischievousness of the act. Given
the apparent mischievousness of the act, the less the temptation
yielded to the greater the depravity of disposition; but the
stronger the temptation, the less conclusive is the evidence of
depravity. It follows that the penalty should be increased - i.e.
the fear of punishment should be artificially intensified, in
proportion as, apart from that fear, the temptation is stronger.
We now come to consequences. The mischief of the act is the sum
of its mischievous consequences, primary and secondary. The
primary mischief sub- divides into original, i.e. to the sufferer
in the first instance; and derivative, to the definite persons
who suffer as a direct consequence, whether through their
interest, or merely through sympathy.
The secondary mischiefs, affecting not specific persons but the
community, are actual danger, or alarm - the apprehension of
pain. For the occurrence of the act points to the possibility of
its repetition; weakening the influence both of the political and
of the moral sanction. An act of which the primary consequences
are mischievous may have secondary beneficial consequences which
altogether outweight the primary mischief - e.g. the legal
punishment of crime. The circumstances influencing the secondary
mischiefs of alarm and danger are the intentionality, the
consciousness, the motive and the disposition; danger depending
on the real, and alarm on the apparent, state of mind, though the
real and the apparent coincide more commonly than not.
Between the completely intentional and completely unintentional
act there are various stages, depending on the degree of
consciousness, as explained above. The excellence of the motive
does not obliterate the mischievousness of the act; nor vice
versa; but the mischief may be aggravated by a bad motive, as
pointing to greater likelihood of repetition.
Punishment, being primarily mischievous, is out of place when
groundless, inefficacious, unprofitable, or needless. Punishment
is inefficacious when it is ex post facto, or extra-legal, or
secret; or in the case of irresponsible (including intoxicated)
persons; and also so far as the intention of the act was
incomplete, or where the act was actually or practically under
compulsion. It is unprofitable when under ordinary circumstances
the evils of the punishment outweigh those of the offence. It is
needless when the end in view can be as well or better attained
otherwise.
Now, the aim of the legislator is (1) to prevent mischief
altogether; (2) to minimise the inclination to do mischief; (3)
to make the prevention cheap. Hence (1) the punishment must
outweigh the profit of the offence to the doer; (2) the greater
the mischief, the greater the expense worth incurring to prevent
it; (3) alternative offences which are not equally mischievous,
as robbery and robbery with murder, must not be equally punished;
(4) the punishment must not be excessive, and therefore should
take into account the circumstances influencing sensibility; (5)
so also must the weakness of the punishment due to its
remoteness, and the impelling force of habit.
The properties of punishment necessary to its adjustment to a
particular offence are these: (1) variability in point of
quantity, so that it shall be neither excessive nor deficient;
(2) equality, so that when applied in equal degree it shall cause
equal pain - e.g. banishment may mean much to one man, little to
another; (3) commensurability with other punishments; (4)
characteristicalness, or appropriateness; (5) exemplarity - it
must not seem less than it is in fact; (6) frugality - none of
the pain it causes is to be wasted. Minor desirable qualities are
(7) subserviency to reformation of character; (8) efficiency in
disabling from mischief; (9) subserviency to compensation; (10)
popularity, i.e. accordant to common approbation; (11)
remissibility.
An offence - a punishable act - is constituted such by the
community; though it ought not to be an offence unless contrary
to utility, it may be so. It is assumed to be a detrimental act;
detrimental therefore to some person or persons, whether the
offender himself or other assignable persons, or to persons not
assignable.
Offences against assignable persons other than the offender form
the first class; offences against individuals, or private
offences, or private extra- regarding offences. The second class
is formed by semi-public offences, i.e. not against assignable
individuals, nor the community at large, but a separable group in
the community, e.g. a class or a locality. The third class are
those which are simply self-regarding; the fourth, against the
community at large; the fifth, multiform or heterogeneous,
comprising falsehood and breaches of trust.
The first class may be subdivided into offences against
(1) the person,
(2) reputation,
(3) to property,
(4) condition - i.e. the serviceableness to the individual or
other persons,
(5) person and property together,
(6) person and reputation.
The second, semi-public, class, being acts which endanger a
portion of the community, are those operating through calamity,
or of mere delinquency. The latter are subdivided on the same
lines as private offences. So with the third or self-regarding
class.
In class four, public offences fall under eleven divisions:
(1) offences against external security - i.e. from foreign foes;
(2) against justice - i.e. the execution of justice;
(3) against the preventive branch of police;
(4) against the public force - i.e. military control;
(5) against increase of national felicity;
(6) against public wealth - i.e. the exchequer;
(7) against population;
(8) against national wealth - i.e. enrichment of the population;
(9) against sovereignty;
(10) against religion;
(11) against national interests in general.
In class five, falsehood comprises simple falsehoods, forgery,
personation and perjury; again distributable like the private
offences. In the case of trusts, there are two parties - the
trustee and the beneficiary. Offences under this head cannot, for
various reasons, be conveniently referred to offences against
property or condition, which also must be kept separate from each
other. As regards the existence of a trust: as against the
trustee, offences are (1) wrongful non-investment of trust, and
wrongful interception of trust, where the trusteeship is to his
benefit; or (2) where it is troublesome, wrongful imposition of
trust. Both may similarly be offences against the beneficiary. As
regards the exercise of the trust, we have negative breach of
trust, positive breach of trust, abuse of trust, disturbance of
trust, and bribery.
We may now distribute class one - offences against the individual
- into genera; to do so with the other classes would be
superfluous. Simple offences against the person are actions
referring to his actual person, body or mind, or external objects
affecting his happiness. These must take effect either through
his will, or not. In the former case, either by constraint, or
restraint, confinement, or banishment. In any case the effect
will be mortal or not mortal; if not mortal, reparable or
irreparable injury when corporal, sufferance when mental. So the
list stands - simple and irreparable corporal injuries, simple
injurious restraint or constraint, wrongful confinement or
banishment, homicide or menacement, actual or apprehended mental
injuries.
Against reputation the genera of offences are (1) defamation, (2)
vilification. Of offences against property, simple in their
effects, whether by breach of trust or otherwise, the genera are:
wrongful non-investment, interception, divestment, usurpation,
investment of property; wrongful withholding of services,
destruction, occupation, or detainment, embezzlement, theft,
defraudment, extortion.
Of complex offences against person and reputation together:
corporal insults, insulting menacement, seduction, and forcible
seduction, simple lascivious injuries. Against person and
property together: forcible interception, divestment, usurpation,
investment, or destruction of property, forcible occupation of
movables, forcible entry, forcible detainment of immovables
robbery.
As to offences against condition: conditions are either domestic
or civil; domestic relations are either purely natural, purely
instituted, or mixed. Of the first, we are concerned only with
the marital, parental and filial relations. Under the second head
are the relations of master and servant, guardian and ward. In
the case of master and servants, the headings of offences are
much like those against property. Guardianship is required in the
cases of infancy and insanity; again the list of offences is
similar. The parental and filial relations, so far as they are
affected by institutions, comprise those both of master and
servant, and of guardian and ward; so that the offences are
correspondent.
The relation of husband and wife also comprises those of master
and guardian to servant and ward. But there are further certain
reciprocal services which are the subject of the marital
contract, by which polygamy and adultery are constituted offences
in Christian countries, and also the refusal of conjugal rights.
From domestic conditions we pass to civil.
Eliminating all those which can be brought under the categories
of trusts and domestic conditions, there remain conditions
constituted by beneficial powers over things, beneficial rights
to things, rights to services, and by corresponding duties; and
between these and property there is no clear line of demarcation,
yet we can hit upon some such conditions as separable. Such are
rank and profession which entail specific obligations and rights
- these are not property but conditions; as distinguished from
other exclusive rights bestowed by the law, concerned with
saleable articles (e.g. copyright), which convey not conditions,
but property. So, naturalisation conveys the conditions of a
natural born subject.
Public offences are to be catalogued in a manner similar to
private offences.
My object has been to combine intelligibility with precision;
technical terms lack the former quality, popular terms the
latter. Hence the plan of the foregoing analysis has been to take
the logical whole constituted by the sum of possible offences,
dissect it in as many directions as were necessary, and carry the
process down to the point where each idea could be expressed in
current phraseology. Thus it becomes equally applicable to the
legal concerns of all countries or systems.
The advantages of this method are: it is convenient for the
memory, gives room for general propositions, points out the
reason of the law, and is applicable to the laws of all nations.
Hence we are able to characterise the five classes of offences.
Thus, of private offences, we note that they are primarily
against assignable individuals, admit of compensation and
retaliation, and so on; of semi-public offences, that they are
not against assignable individuals and, with self-regarding
offences, admit of neither compensation nor retaliation; a series
of generalisations respecting each class can be added.
The relation between penal jurisprudence and private ethics must
be clarified. Both are concerned with the production of
happiness. A man's private ethics are concerned with his duty to
himself and to his neighbour; prudence, probity and beneficence.
Those cases described as unmeet for punishment are all within the
ethical, but outside the legislative, sphere, except the
'groundless' cases, which are outside both. The special field of
private ethics is among the cases where punishment is
'unprofitable' or 'inefficacious,' notably those which are the
concern of prudence. So with the rules of beneficence; but
beneficence might well be made compulsory in a greater degree
than it is. The special sphere of legislation, however, lies in
the field of probity.
A work of jurisprudence is either expository of what the law is,
or censorial, showing what it should be. It may relate to either
local or universal jurisprudence; but if expository can hardly be
more than local. It may be internal, or international; if
internal, it may be national or provincial, historical or living;
it may be divided into statutory and customary, into civil and
penal or criminal.
Jeremy Bentham
1748-1832
Bentham willed his body to be dissected and preserved at University College, London. His head was replaced with a wax one (the real one is in the college safe) and the body, dressed in his own clothes, is stuffed with hay, wool, and lavender to keep moths away. Mr. Bentham, in his glass fronted mahogany case, has attended his own annual memorial dinner.