6 - Justifying the State Flashcards

1
Q

What is utilitarianism?

A
  • Distinction between the good and the right

- The right action maximizes utility (happiness, well-being, pleasure, preference satisfaction)

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2
Q

Who believed that we should only obey the law if it produces greater happiness than disobeying the law

A

Jeremy Bentham

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3
Q

Three points of utilitarianism

A

1) Theory of the good (utility, happiness)
2) Commitment to equal concern (provide equal wellbeing to everyone)
3) Requirement of maximization: duty to produce as much good as possible

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4
Q

What is the pleasure machine?

A
  • Whatever is needed to be happy all of the time

- Would you plug in?

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5
Q

What is the experience machine?

A
  • You have to put in work to learn and grow

- Vote, engage discuss, stay involved in discourse

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6
Q

Other accounts of welfare

A
  • Desire satisfaction: as long as individuals are getting what they want then the state is meeting utility
  • Informed desire satisfaction: educated/experienced and informed people have their desires met
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7
Q

How do utilitarianism and political obligation connect?

A

-Obey the law ONLY IF doing so will produce greater happiness than disobeying (otherwise, disobey the law)

Objection: this is a law-breaker’s charter!

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8
Q

What is indirect utilitarianism?

A
  • Don’t justify particular activities by appeal to utility promotion
  • Well-being is maximized by each of us obeying the laws
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9
Q

What is the decision rule? (indirect utilitarianism)

A

Break the law if it doesn’t make you happy

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10
Q

Is utilitarianism too demanding?

A

Direct utilitarianism: yes (world poverty - keep giving until it hurts)

Indirect utilitarianism: not necessarily (secure property rights can contribute to greatest happiness)

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11
Q

Is utilitarianism too permissive?

A

Can require injustice (torture, slavery)

Hard-headed utilitarian reply: the benefit of increased utility trumps the lack of benefit experienced by some

Appeasement utilitarianism: the alternative could be worse

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12
Q

General objection to utilitarianism

A

It fails to explain why actions are morally right or wrong - can get you the right answer for the wrong reason

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13
Q

What is the principle of fairness?

A

When I receive benefits from the state, fairness requires that I take on my share of the burden, including restrictions on my freedom and obeying the law

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14
Q

Benefits and burdens of the fairness principle

A

Benefits: Peace, order, and security provided by a functioning legal system

Burdens: Obeying the law

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15
Q

What are free riders?

A

People who enjoy life under the law but don’t follow it

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16
Q

Long-term benefits of the fairness principle

A
  • Enforced laws benefit everyone
  • Sacrifice in the short term that pays off in the long term
  • David Hume: Make short-term and long-term interests coincide
17
Q

What is Nozick’s question? What is the answer?

A

Q: If others force benefits on me, am I obligated to reciprocate?

A: We are not obligated to obey the state because it breaks the principle of volunteerism

18
Q

Flaw of the fairness principle

A

I have a duty of fairness to do my part ONLY if I accept the benefits

Problem: How can we NOT accept the benefits the state provides?

19
Q

Why utilitarianism?

A
  • Human happiness - maximizes human happiness
  • Impartial concern - state seeks benefit of all in an impartial way
  • Consequentialism - looks at the outcome of the event to see if it maximizes happiness
20
Q

Who discusses the principle of fairness?

A

HLA Hart