What did John Stuart Mill believe?
John Stuart Mill believed something very simple, but also very demanding:
An action is right if it creates happiness, and wrong if it leads to suffering.
This idea is known as the greatest happiness principle. It means that the moral value of an action depends entirely on its consequences.
For Mill, happiness means pleasure and the absence of pain.
This makes his theory a form of consequentialism: what matters is not your intention or the rule you follow, but the result your action produces.
A key feature of Mill’s thinking is that it is impartial. The happiness that matters is not just your own, it is the happiness of everyone affected by your actions.
Each person’s happiness counts equally. Your wellbeing is not more important than that of a stranger.
This is a demanding idea. It asks us to step outside our own perspective and consider the full impact of what we do.
Think about it:
In what situations do you find it easiest to think about others?
And when is it hardest?
Example: Should you speak up?
Imagine this situation:
A friend has copied someone else’s homework. You know about it.
If you say nothing, your friend avoids trouble.
If you speak up, your friend may get in trouble, but the situation becomes fairer for everyone else.
The student whose work was copied receives no recognition. The rest of the class is placed at a disadvantage.
Mill would ask you to look at all the consequences, not just what is easiest in the moment, but what is fair for everyone involved.
The right action, he would argue, is the one that creates the greatest overall benefit, even when it is uncomfortable.