I'm finishing my lecture on utilitarianism for this week's class. Mind if I share my favorite John Stuart Mill quote?
Posted by Tim at June 26, 2004 12:34 PM
Capacity for the nobler feelings is in most natures a very tender plant, easily killed, not only by hostile influences, but by mere want of sustenance; and in the majority of young persons it speedily dies away if the occupations to which their position in life has devoted them, and the society into which it has thrown them, are not favourable to keeping that higher capacity in exercise. Men lose their high aspirations as they lose their intellectual tastes, because they have not time or opportunity for indulging them; and they addict themselves to inferior pleasures, not because they deliberately prefer them, but because they are either the only ones to which they have access, or the only ones which they are any longer capable of enjoying. It may be questioned whether any one who has remained equally susceptible to both classes of pleasures, ever knowingly and calmly preferred the lower; though many, in all ages, have broken down in an ineffectual attempt to combine both.
I like this one:
"War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse." I couldn't find the whole passage online, but it's gold...
Posted by: tom at July 15, 2004 03:13 AMGreat quote! Mill is absolutely right.
Posted by: tim at July 15, 2004 10:08 AM