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Should We Maximize Utility?

Ben Bramble, James Lenman

A Debate about Utilitarianism

Barcode 9781032291048
Paperback

Original price £46.53 - Original price £46.53
Original price
£46.53
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Release Date: 27/03/2025

Genre: Philosophy & Spirituality
Sub-Genre: Theology
Label: Routledge
Series: Little Debates about Big Questions
Language: English
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd

A Debate about Utilitarianism

Utilitarianism directs us to act in ways that impartially maximize welfare or utility or at least aim to do that. The two authors debate various forms of this longstanding ethical theory, arguing for very different conclusions, in a way that is sure to leave readers with new views of their own moral thoughts and lives.


Utilitarianism directs us to act in ways that impartially maximize welfare or utility or at least aim to do that. Some find this view highly compelling. Others object that it has intuitively repugnant results, that it condones evildoing and injustice, that it is excessively imposing and controlling, that it is alienating, and that it fails to offer meaningful, practical guidance.

In this ‘Little Debates’ volume, James Lenman argues that utilitarianism’s directive to improve the whole universe on a cosmic time scale is apt to lead it down a path of imperious moral overreach. The project, he further maintains, ultimately shipwrecks on an extreme lack of epistemic humility in framing the determinants of what is morally right and wrong beyond the limits of what we can ever hope to know. Utilitarianism thus leaves us morally clueless. In contrast, Ben Bramble seeks to develop and defend an original form of utilitarianism, less vulnerable than other, more familiar versions to a number of important objections, including those raised by Lenman. He aims to avoid such unappealing results by presenting it as a claim about what we have the most reason to do, and not as a theory of right action, which Bramble urges we should understand quite differently by reference to what would motivate virtuous people.

Key Features:

  • Focuses on one of the dominant ethical theories debated by moral philosophers today
  • Clearly written, free of jargon and technicality, and highly accessible to students
  • Addresses questions of great importance to anyone wishing to grow in understanding of human moral life
  • Provides a glossary of key terms highlighted in bold as well as a bibliography for further reading
  • Important issues discussed include: welfare; value; right action; virtue; impartiality; obligations to non-human animals; the badness of human extinction; the happiness of future people; the ethics of climate change; the long term future; and the moral significance of the limits to what we can know.