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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:19:13 2006 |
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==================== HES POSTING ====================
According to the Oxford English Dictionary and several dictionaries of
philosophy, the term "utility" was first used in the context of
philosophical ethics by David Hume in 1751 (Inquiry concerning the
Principles of Morals -- chapter 5 "Why Utility Pleases"), who made it the
basic criterion of ethical value.
The term was in frequent use in English from 1540 onward, although it
appears from my perusal of the OED that the first uses of the term related
to philosophy and economics date from the late-1600s to mid-1700s.
Hedonistic theories of morality go back to the Greeks -- Aristippus of
Cyrene and Epicurus -- but these tended to be egoistical rather than
universal, and it is not until the 1600s that we begin to see attempts to
reconcile the two. Precursors of a universalistic conception of utility:
Richard Cumberland (1631-1718) made "the greatest good of the universe of
rational beings" the chief ethical criterion. At about the same time,
William Wollaston (1659-1724) spoke of a "moral arithmetic" of pleasure
and pain which rational being used to make ethical decisions. Both
Cumberland and Wollaston were English.
Frances Hutcheson, Adam Smith's teacher, introduced the phrase "greatest
happiness for the greatest number" as the test of a right action.
John Gay also employed Hutcheson's principle, deriving it from the will of
God.
William Paley (at about the same time as Bentham) created a theological
utilitarianism which incorporated theological sanctions.
I expect the gendered aspect of the term "utility" and "utilitarianism"
emerges from the the link that Cumberland expresses most clearly between
utility and rational beings. The Western philosophical tradition never
considered women rational beings, and hence they could not be expected to
engage in the "moral arithmetic" of utility maximization. But I do not
know of any feminist philosophical work on this.
Ross B. Emmett
Manager, Electronic Information, History of Economics Society
Augustana University College
e-mail: [log in to unmask]
URL: http://www.augustana.ab.ca/~emmer
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