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The ‘Multicultural’ Mill*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 January 2009
Extract
An argument has been made for identifying Mill as an individualistic thinker. Certainly, A System of Logic (1843) develops views, such as methodological individualism and a conception of the ‘art of life’, which portray persons as having unique essences that, when supported by autonomous choices with respect to life experiments, reveal their individuality. These views are at least loosely applied in later works. Principles of Political Economy (1848) treats economic aspects of social life frequently in terms consistent with those of classical economists for whom the self-interested actions of individuals achieve economic growth. On Liberty (1859), the flagship volume in this view, and, less centrally, The Subjection of Women (1869) provide impressive testimony for an individualistic way of life in terms of its contributions to social progress. Considerations on Representative Government (1861) examines means for institutionalizing an individualistic way of life. And Utilitarianism (1863) provides a basis for justifying an individualistic view of this social programme: more satisfaction of individual desires. But such an account, Mill's own assessment notwithstanding, would be unsatisfactory.
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Footnotes
We want to thank Larry Biskowski, Richard Ellis, Richard Galvin, and Dennis Thompson for assistance with previous versions of this paper.
References
1 For Mill's assessment see, Autobiography, ed. Robson, John M. and Stillinger, Jack, Toronto, 1981Google Scholar, Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, i. 132Google Scholar; for dissenting views of Mill's contemporaries see Kinzer, Bruce L., Robson, Ann P., and Robson, John M., eds., A Moralist In and Out of Parliament, Toronto, 1992.Google Scholar
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46 How much protection obviously depends on the specification of harm. Gray, , pp. 49–50Google Scholar, for instance, suggests a narrow specification of damage to a person's most basic interests in security and autonomy.
47 Beyond this ‘social’ concern, Mill's critics have pointed out that the principles of utility and liberty are theories of different subjects: the good and of justice, respectively. See James Fitzjames Stephen; and Himmelfarb, On Liberty and Liberalism. If there is a means of achieving logical compatibility between these principles, it may be Richard Galvin's rule-utilitarian approach, ‘The Principles of Utility and Liberty in the Thought of J. S. Mill’, unpublished paper, Texas Christian University, 1992. He argues that the principle of utility is both foundational and fundamental. And stipulating, as he thinks Mill does, the empirical fact that, the greater the level of liberty, the greater the level of aggregate utility, the principle of liberty may be deduced as a corollary of the principle of utility. Further, the harm principle may be deduced from this pair inasmuch as the way to maximize individual liberty is to adopt only those social rules that prohibit harm to others, rules consistent with, if not optimizing of, the utilitarian principle.
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50 Principles of Political Economy, CW, iii. 791–2.Google Scholar Barry, Brian, Theories of Justice, vol. 1 of A Treatise on Social Justice, Berkeley, Ca., 1989Google Scholar, makes similar claims. See also Kaus, Mickey, The End of Equality, New York, 1992.Google Scholar
51 Jeremy Bentham held that, in the absence of compelling evidence to the contrary, it was reasonable to assume that persons derive pleasure from income fairly similarly and thus that, in conjunction with a further assumption about the diminishing marginal utility of income, a roughly equal distribution of income would maximize utility across a population. See the discussion of Posner, Richard A., The Economics of Justice, Cambridge, Mass., 1981, pp. 55–6.Google Scholar As Nozick, Robert, Anarchy, State, and Utopia, New York, 1974, p. 41Google Scholar, points out, this leaves utilitarianism vulnerable to ‘utility monsters’ who require immense resources to derive the same satisfaction as others derive from much more modest amounts.
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59 These works are: On Liberty (1859)Google Scholar, The Subjection of Women (1861, although not published until 1869)Google Scholar, Considerations on Representative Government (1861)Google Scholar, Principles of Political Economy (fifth edition in 1862)Google Scholar, and Utilitarianism (written during 1854–9, but not published until 1863).Google Scholar
60 Mill met Harriet Taylor in 1830, and the two carried on an intense if platonic relationship until John Taylor's death in 1849. Mill and Harriet married in 1851, and Harriet died in 1858. See Stephen, Leslie, The English Utilitarians, 3 vols., London, 1900, iii. 68Google Scholar; and von HayekFriedrich, A. Friedrich, A., John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor: Their Correspondence and Subsequent Marriage, Chicago, 1951.Google Scholar
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62 Haskell.
63 Additional support for our combinatorial view appears in the work of other critics. See Berlin, , p. 205Google Scholar on Mill's refusal to be tied to a fixed conception of human nature; and Ashcraft's portrayal of the development of Mill's ‘sociological’ view of society as divided into interest-based cultures with distinctive empirical-normative perspectives, pp. 107–9, as well as experiencing difficulties with these cultures talking to one another in the absence of the facilitating services of an independent entity that could stand apart from and above the fray, pp. 113–16.
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