Bentham's words, cited by you, could, without further qualification, be used to support the policies of every dictator that the world has ever known; to whom men have bent their heads and borne their yokes. The enforcement of unjust laws is their only true expression of 'value'; for, if they are ultimately held to be unenforceable (as that against showing your knicker elastic seems to be in at least one state of the USA) they are void and worthless. So, maybe Bentham was, sometimes, 'un-Benthamite' - I can live with that - we are all somewhat contradictory! As for Mill - I am glad that you agree that this genius's words accord with my position - not accord, exactly, since this short book helped, more than any other, anybody or anything, to form my views and is, probably, short though it be, one of the most significant things (not just books) that I have ever encountered and I would that every law-giver should read it; even just chapter 4: to the greater benefit of individual liberty and, moreover, to the saving of state resources, in needless over-regulation and the employment, in the acts of over-regulation, of so many people, in so many areas of human activity - when they could be more usefully employed in tailoring, cobblering and haberdashery. It is late and I must end soon - but what is merely personally disagreeable should never be made into the legally criminal - and I repeat what I have often said: that a resort to regulate purely social behaviour, by meting out criminal sanctions (as the social sanctions have evaporated in a welter of chaos). is a sure sign that the society in which it happens is on the brink of collapse; even if some people, for the time being, feel comfortable enough in their cocoons.marcelo wrote:Bentham’ quotation, however, does not taste of paternalism, for it seems to me that he does not mean that laws should be enforced in order to change individuals’ sense of what is agreeable or repugnant. This would be a downright un-Benthamite position. As for Mill, the passage you quoted supports your point, but remember: Mill committed himself to a very unreasonable understanding of the diversity of things which may count as “agreeable”. There are for Mill forms of pleasure which are intrinsically superior to other forms of pleasure. This is a quite un-Benthamite position, for Bentham assumed that push-pin was no worse than poetry. Now, for our discussion in this thread, it would be a matter of uttermost importance to discover: (1) whether Mill smoked; (2) whether he counted smoking among the superior forms of pleasure, (3) whether he wore a smoking jacket or something sartorially equivalent.storeynicholas wrote:The faithful application of the Bentham idea here must surely depend on an objective judgment of the nature and the degree of the ill to be avoided and of the percipience of the foresight claimed and tends, in any event, to a rather paternalistic doctrine. I prefer this passage, from chapter 4 of J S Mill's On Liberty (Of the Limits to the Authority of Society Over the Individual:marcelo wrote: “Law alone can accustom men to bow their heads under the yoke of foresight, hard at first to bear, but afterwards light and agreeable.” (Jeremy Bentham)
The acts of an individual may be hurtful to others, or wanting in due consideration for their welfare, without violating any of their constituted rights. The offender may then be justly punished by opinion, though not by law. As soon as any part of a person's conduct affects prejudicially the interests of others, society has jurisdiction over it, and the question whether the general welfare will or will not be promoted by interfering with it becomes open to discussion. But there is no room for entertaining any such question when a person's conduct affects the interests of no persons besides himself, or needs not affect them unless they like (all persons concerned being of full age and the ordinary amount of understanding). In all such cases there should be perfect freedom, legal and social, to do the action and stand the consequences.
This principle perfectly applies to smoking in public, in my view. It should be in all a matter for each individual's sense of courtesy and consideration and for the application of social sanctions, for breach of the rules of courtesy. When a law interferes with the rights of a cigar smokers' club to smoke together in their own club, much worse is done than the offering of a discourtesy, the very heart of Liberty suffers a grievous blow and, once the hacking away at it starts, as we learn from Costi's other post today, it is not long before we will have to watch whether our underpants' elastic is visible above our Daks tops.
NJS
NJS