Abstract
In his Theory of Justice John Rawls presents a critique of utilitarianism. He focuses on
utilitarianism in the version offered by John Stuart Mill, but Rawls’s analysis of Mills’
views is schematic and limited to Mill’s ethical theory. Rawls does not recognize the
importance of perfectionistic themes in Mill’s theory, nor does he note the
consequences of that issue for the problem of gender equality. Rawls discuses those
themes in his Lectures on the History of Political Philosophy. If one is primarily guided
by Rawls’s Theory of Justice, however, the person will be unable to appreciate
similarities between Rawls’s and Mill’s positions. When focusing on the Lectures it is
possible to recognize these affinities that are only dimly insinuated in the Theory of
Justice. In the later volume they are strong enough to support the claim that a more
pronounced affinity may bind these two authors that are not obvious at the first glance.
I proceed therefore (1) to expose some shortcomings in the presentation of Mill’s
utilitarianism by Rawls; (2) go on to analyse Lectures on the History of Political
Philosophy in order to present a more penetrating reading of Mill’s utilitarianism by
including its perfectionistic content; and (3) finally on the basis of those claims I point
to some practical consequences of Mill’s and Rawls’s views on gender equality.