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Utilitarianism
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Utilitarianism is a moral and political philosophy holding that the right action is the one that produces the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people. It appears frequently in government, political science, and philosophy courses because it offers a systematic framework for evaluating public policy, law, and individual conduct based on consequences rather than fixed rules. The theory raises genuinely difficult academic questions about how happiness is measured, whose interests count, and whether good outcomes can justify harmful means—tensions that make it a productive subject for rigorous analysis across disciplines.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Many are comparative, weighing utilitarianism against competing frameworks such as deontology and virtue ethics, or examining specific thinkers like John Stuart Mill alongside Kantian moral theory. Others apply utilitarian reasoning to concrete cases, including film scenarios such as Extreme Measures, to test how the theory performs under pressure. Additional essays engage normative ethics broadly, situating utilitarianism within larger debates about morality, rationality, and the obligations individuals have to society.

A strong essay on utilitarianism begins with a focused thesis that takes a clear position—either defending, critiquing, or qualifying the theory—rather than simply summarizing it. Evidence drawn from philosophical argument, real-world policy examples, or ethical case studies tends to carry the most weight. Writers should be careful to engage with the tension between individual rights and collective happiness, since ignoring this conflict produces a one-sided analysis. The most common pitfall is treating utilitarianism as a single, settled doctrine rather than acknowledging the meaningful differences among its variants.

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Paper Undergraduate
Tiger Woods: Career, impact, and legacy in professional golf
Tiger Woods: Infidelity, Celebrity and Ethics
Paper Undergraduate
Happiness Principle,\' Developed by Utilitarian
¶ … Happiness Principle,' developed by Utilitarian philosophers including Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill states: "actions are right only insofar as they tend to produce the greatest balance of pleasure over pain…
Paper Undergraduate
Orwell Nineteen Eighty-Four by George
Nineteen eighty-four by George Orwell is a popular novel that was published in 1949. The novel attempts to paints a picture of what the future will look like by describing the state of the world in 1984.
Paper Undergraduate
Reducing Citizen Complaints: Community Policing Strategies
A growing body of evidence suggests that in any police department a small percentage of officers are responsible for a disproportionate share of citizen complaints. Develop an affirmative action program designed to…
Essay Doctorate
Plato and John Stuart Mill Glaucon\'s Challenge
What if John Stuart Mill had to give a response to the challenge posed by Glaucon to Socrates at the start of Plato's Republic Book 2? Glaucon is inquiring whether justice is a good in itself or is an unpleasant activity promoted because it leads to good results, and offers the famous story of the Ring of Gyges. For JS Mill, there is no insistence on the Socratic idealization of actions being good intrinsically: rather Mill would concede to Glaucon the notion that actions are judged by results. According to Mill's Utilitarianism, it is impossible to imagine oneself existing outside society, and social existence requires behavior which promotes an idea of public good.
Paper Doctorate
Ferrari Create Premium Eco-Car? Ferrari
Ferrari Eco-Car Independent Research Proposal
Paper Undergraduate
Critical analysis of moral and ethical dilemmas in occupational therapy
Moral and Ethical Dilemma in Occupational Therapy
Paper Doctorate
Fringe: What Lies Below Fringe
Fringe is about an FBI team that joins forces with a scientist (once institutionalized) and his son to crack cases that are considered "fringe" cases because they lie outside of what is considered the norm.
Thesis Undergraduate
Charles Dickens Hard Times
Hard Times and Dickens as a Social Critic
Paper Undergraduate
Rural School Closure: Utilitarianism, Deontology, and Research Methods
School Closure Research -- Peggy and Brian Scenario