Conservatism and Conservation

Philosophy 61 (238):503 - 512 (1986)
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Abstract

Utilitarians believe that personal decisions and public policies should be made so as to maximize the public good, or, as Jeremy Bentham put it, to produce the greatest good of the greatest number. Bentham identified the public good with the maximization of happiness, and believed that many traditional practices were inimical to the production of happiness. So in the name of maximizing the public good, Bentham advocated, for example, extending the franchise, reforming the criminal code and re-designing prisons. People's prejudices and traditional habits of thought must yield in the face of utilitarian-inspired reforms

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On Preserving the Natural Environment.Mark Sagoff - 1974 - Yale Law Journal 84 (2):205-267.

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