The Philosophy Book

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191


See also: Thomas Hobbes 112–15 ■ John Locke 130–33 ■ Jeremy Bentham 174 ■
Bertrand Russell 236–39 ■ Karl Popper 262–65 ■ John Rawls 294–95


John Stuart Mill


John Stuart Mill was born in
London in 1806. His father
was the Scottish philosopher
and historian James Mill, who
founded the movement of
“philosophical radicals” with
Jeremy Bentham. John was
educated at home by his
father, whose demanding
program began with teaching
Greek to John when he was
only three years old.
After years of intense study,
Mill suffered a breakdown
at the age of 20. He left
university to work for the East
India Company, where he
stayed until his retirement in
1857, as it gave him a living
and time to write. During this
period he met Harriet Taylor,
advocate of women’s rights,
who—after a relationship of 20
years—eventually became his
wife. Mill served as a Member
of Parliament from 1865 to
1868, putting into practice his
moral and political philosophy.

Key works

1843 System of Logic
1848 Principles of Political
Economy
1859 On Liberty
1861 Utilitarianism
1869 The Subjection of Women
1874 On Nature

shaped the 18th-century revolutions
of both Europe and America. Its
originator, Jeremy Bentham, was
a friend of the Mill family, and he
influenced John’s home education.


Victorian liberalism
As a philosopher Mill sets himself
the task of synthesizing a valuable
intellectual heritage with the new
19th-century Romanticism. His
approach is less sceptical than
that of Hume (who argued that all
knowledge comes from sense


experience, and nothing is certain)
and less dogmatic than Bentham
(who insisted that everything be
judged on its usefulness), but their
empiricism and utilitarianism
informed his thinking. Mill’s moral
and political philosophy is less
extreme than his predecessors’,
aiming for reform rather than
revolution, and it formed the basis
of British Victorian liberalism.
After completing his first
philosophical work, the exhaustive
six-volume System of Logic, Mill ❯❯

THE AGE OF REVOLUTION


Over his own
body and mind,
the individual
is sovereign.

Decisions should be
made on the principle
of thegreatest good for
the greatest number.

Individuals should be
free to do whatever gives
them pleasure, even if
it could harm them...

...but they are
not entitled to do
things that could
harm others.

Individuals can choose
to do things that affect
their own body, but not
that of someone else.
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