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  1. John Stuart Mill's Concept of Utility.Wendy Donner - 1983 - Dialogue 22 (3):479-494.
    I offer here an interpretation and defense of John Stuart Mill's qualitative hedonism. One of the results of Mill's well-known mental crisis was a concept of utility substantially different from the orthodox Benthamite quantitative hedonism which Mill came to regard as being fraught with difficulties. He saw Bentham's concept as being excessively narrow, and he sought to overcome its limitations by enlarging his own concept of utility. He did this by including the quality of pleasures along with the quantity in (...)
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  • Why not happiness?J. L. Cowan - 1989 - Philosophical Studies 56 (2):135 - 161.
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  • Happiness and pleasure.Daniel M. Haybron - 2001 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (3):501-528.
    This paper argues against hedonistic theories of happiness. First, hedonism is too inclusive: many pleasures cannot plausibly be construed as constitutive of happiness. Second, any credible theory must count either attitudes of life satisfaction, affective states such as mood, or both as constituents of happiness; yet neither sort of state reduces to pleasure. Hedonism errs in its attempt to reduce happiness, which is at least partly dispositional, to purely episodic experiential states. The dispositionality of happiness also undermines weakened nonreductive forms (...)
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  • Pleasure and happiness.Wayne Davis - 1981 - Philosophical Studies 39 (3):305 - 317.
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  • (1 other version)Review: Pleasure and Pain Revisited. [REVIEW]R. S. Peters - 1969 - Philosophy 44 (168):156 - 159.
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