Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Bentham: Punishment and the Utilitarian Use of Persons as Means
View through CrossRef
One of the main barriers against a Utilitarian justification of punishment is a widespread criticism that if punishment is evil justified by the good it can achieve, then the state could use persons as a means to an end in pursuing this good. This opens the door, at a theoretical level, for the potential punishment of innocents, disproportionate punishment and failure to respect persons as rational and responsible agents. Further, critics argue that any considerations of security or utility guard against the perceived risks contingently, without intrinsic commitment to respecting persons as ends in themselves. This article addresses the criticism fundamentally by returning to Bentham’s original writings and demonstrating that a principle of equality is embedded in the greatest happiness as an end of government. The principle of equality can theoretically be developed using the tools of Bentham’s political theory, including his commitments to democracy, to the elimination of pain and to the differentiation between real and fictitious entities, to ensure that a Utilitarian theory of punishment, as part of its premise, would be constrained from using persons as mere means. Further, building on the equality of happiness, the article proposes an individualistic justification of punishment that responds to the traditional accusations of innocents’ punishment and excessive punishment, and ensures the respect of persons as rational and responsible agents.
Title: Bentham: Punishment and the Utilitarian Use of Persons as Means
Description:
One of the main barriers against a Utilitarian justification of punishment is a widespread criticism that if punishment is evil justified by the good it can achieve, then the state could use persons as a means to an end in pursuing this good.
This opens the door, at a theoretical level, for the potential punishment of innocents, disproportionate punishment and failure to respect persons as rational and responsible agents.
Further, critics argue that any considerations of security or utility guard against the perceived risks contingently, without intrinsic commitment to respecting persons as ends in themselves.
This article addresses the criticism fundamentally by returning to Bentham’s original writings and demonstrating that a principle of equality is embedded in the greatest happiness as an end of government.
The principle of equality can theoretically be developed using the tools of Bentham’s political theory, including his commitments to democracy, to the elimination of pain and to the differentiation between real and fictitious entities, to ensure that a Utilitarian theory of punishment, as part of its premise, would be constrained from using persons as mere means.
Further, building on the equality of happiness, the article proposes an individualistic justification of punishment that responds to the traditional accusations of innocents’ punishment and excessive punishment, and ensures the respect of persons as rational and responsible agents.
Related Results
Utilitarian Strategies in Bentham and John Stuart Mill
Utilitarian Strategies in Bentham and John Stuart Mill
The argument of this paper is part of a general defence of the claim that Bentham's moral theory embodies a utilitarian theory of distributive justice, which is developed in his Ci...
Early contingency information enhances human punishment sensitivity when punishment is frequent but not rare
Early contingency information enhances human punishment sensitivity when punishment is frequent but not rare
Individuals differ in sensitivity to the adverse consequences of their actions. We have shown that these differences can be linked to differences in correctly learning causal relat...
Jeremy Bentham
Jeremy Bentham
Jeremy Bentham (b. 1748–d. 1832) was an English philosopher and social and legal reformer who wrote on such subjects as moral philosophy, criminal jurisprudence, and penology. In h...
The Drawer of Devils: Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon
The Drawer of Devils: Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon
The purpose of this paper is to determine Jeremy Bentham's application of his own philosophy of utilitarianism when the philosophy was removed from the abstract world of ideas and ...
Outsourcing punishment to karma: Thinking about karma reduces the punishment of transgressors
Outsourcing punishment to karma: Thinking about karma reduces the punishment of transgressors
Punishment and the threat thereof can enforce social norms by deterring inappropriate behaviours and future misdeeds, but enacting punishment can be costly. As a result, individual...
Outsourcing punishment to karma: Thinking about karma reduces the punishment of transgressors
Outsourcing punishment to karma: Thinking about karma reduces the punishment of transgressors
Punishment and the threat thereof can enforce social norms by deterring inappropriate behaviours and future misdeeds, but enacting punishment can be costly. As a result, individual...
Causal inference deficits and integration failure drive stable variation in human punishment sensitivity
Causal inference deficits and integration failure drive stable variation in human punishment sensitivity
Some individuals persist in behaviors that incur harm to themselves or others. While adaptive decision-making requires integrating such punishment feedback to update action selecti...
CAN THE DEATH PENALTY STILL BE CONSIDERED A “CRUEL, INHUMANE AND DEGRADING PUNISHMENT” IN THE FACE OF SOUTH AFRICAN PRISON CONDITIONS?
CAN THE DEATH PENALTY STILL BE CONSIDERED A “CRUEL, INHUMANE AND DEGRADING PUNISHMENT” IN THE FACE OF SOUTH AFRICAN PRISON CONDITIONS?
The use of the death penalty as a form of punishment can be traced back to the earliest human civilisations. South Africa was no stranger to this punishment, and it was only abolis...

