"Comparing john stewart mill and nietzsche" Essays and Research Papers

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    John Stuart Mill

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    J.S. Mill He was the most influential thinker of 19th century. The importance of his political theory is that liberalism made a transition from laissez faire to state centered‚ from negative to positive concept of liberty and from an atomic to more social conception of individual. Mill’s criticism of Bentham’s utilitarianism was one of the most important contributions to political thought. Published the History of India in 1818 His essays “On Liberty” (1859) and “The Subjection of Women” (1861) were

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    Criticism of John Mill

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    Prompt 1 Two criticisms of utilitarianism influence Mill towards rule-utilitarianism. The first criticism involves objectors viewing this philosophy as encouraging society to do what is expedient for the moment (22). The second objection proposes “that there is not time‚ previous to action‚ for calculating and weighing the effects of any line of conduct on the general happiness” (23). Mill argues both of these objections by taking rule-utilitarianism into consideration. Rule- utilitarianism states

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    Chelsea Long Philosophy 100-005 Prompt 2 Final Essay Even though they were separated by thousands of years‚ hundreds of miles‚ and different cultures‚ the philosophical views of Friedrich Nietzsche and Plato can be examined and weighed against each other in many different ways. Friedrich Nietzsche‚ born in 1844‚ was a German philosopher whose main goal was to erect a new image for the people and to create a free spirit in them. Plato‚ born in 427 B.C.‚ was a Greek philosopher whose main goal

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    John Stewart Mill‚ in his essay On Liberty (1859)‚ is concerned with the question of ‘the nature and limits of the power which can be legitimately exercised by society over the individual’ . Thus‚ in this excerpt Mill discusses limited government and personal liberty. Mill argues ‘the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilised community‚ against his will‚ is to prevent harm to others’ . Here Mill presents his ‘harm principle’‚ which classifies all harmful

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    Utilitarianism—by John Stewart Mill Classical utilitarianism is hedonist‚ but values other than‚ or in addition to‚ pleasure (ideal utilitarianism) can be employed‚ or—more neutrally‚ and in a version popular in economics—anything can be regarded as valuable that appears as an object of rational or informed desire (preference utilitarianism). The test of utility maximization can also be applied directly to single acts (act utilitarianism)‚ or to acts only indirectly through some other suitable

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    Utilitarianism In this essay‚ I will give a short summary of John Stewart Mill’s Utilitarianism. I will then examine the strengths and weaknesses of utilitarianism as illustrated in Mill’s Utilitarianism and point out that there are more dilemmas than advantages in Utilitarianism. In John Stewart Mill’s Utilitarianism‚ he begins by presenting a doctrine of ethics based on utility‚ or the Greatest Happiness Principle. He sets forth the idea that the only things that people want are happiness and

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    Nietzsche

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    Introduction Our presentation is about Friedrich Nietzsche who was one of the most important and influential modern thinkers of nineteenth century for his notions of inexistentialism‚ post-modernism‚ and post-structuralism; but before talking about him‚ I would like to tell you a brief introduction of postmodernism and how this philosopher took these concepts to explain his ideologies. One of the main characteristics of postmodern thinking is that the world is seen as much more complex and an

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    Nietzsche

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    onto itself – is a feature of ressentiment: in order to come about‚ slave morality first has to have an opposing‚ external world‚ it needs‚ physiologically speaking‚ external stimuli in order to act at all‚ – its action is basically a reaction” (Nietzsche‚ First Essay para. 10). Slave morality is something that the inferior came up with to comfort themselves against their superiors. Those that are inferior use slave morality to cope with the fact that they are too weak to defend themselves against

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    Nietzsche

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    eventual victory of the “slaves revolt” in morality. In “First Essay: ‘Good and Evil’‚ ‘Good and Bad‚’” which is part of the work On the Genealogy of Morality‚ Nietzsche outlines the two types of morality--aristocratic and slave--and describes the eventual overtaking of aristocratic morality by slave morality through the “slaves revolt.” Nietzsche claims that master morality came first‚ with its defining characteristics being the morality of the masters‚ nobles‚ and warriors who saw themselves and their

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    as vast backgrounds and foregrounds depicting a certain place or type of landscape. In saying this‚ they also exploit the traditional conventions of portraiture‚ as in both portraits the figures are not distinct. The children in Constable’s Flatford Mill appear as indistinct figures‚ as the viewer should only refer to them as subjects that are needed to clarify the context and relation to Constable’s childhood‚ and to ensure the focus is mostly on the landscape. Friedrich’s Wanderer also exploits the

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