The Greatest Happiness Principle and Other Early German Anticipations of Utilitarian Theory*
Joachim Hruschka
Utilitas, 1991, vol. 3, issue 2, 165-177
Abstract:
Bentham was once thought to be the father of the principle which he called ‘the greatest happiness principle’. Now Hutcheson with his ‘greatest happiness for the greatest numbers’ is the generally accepted source of this test of moral behaviour. It is not in Britain, however, but in Germany that one finds its origin. A quarter of a century before Hutcheson's An Inquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue (1725), a German philosopher provided a formulation of the principle on which Hutcheson relied.
Date: 1991
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