SUMMARY OF PRINCIPLES
The reader who would form a just estimate of the
reasonings of these volumes, cannot perhaps proceed more judiciously,
than by examining for himself the truth of these principles, and the
support they afford to the various inferences interspersed through the
work.
The true object of moral and political disquisition, is pleasure
or happiness.
The primary, or earliest class of human pleasures, is the
pleasures of the external senses.
In addition to these, man is susceptible of certain secondary
pleasures, as the pleasures of intellectual feeling, the pleasures of
sympathy, and the pleasures of self-approbation.
The secondary pleasures are probably more exquisite than the
primary:
Or, at least,
The most desirable state of man, is that, in which he has access
to these sources of pleasure, and is in possession of a happiness the
most varied and uninterrupted.
This state is a state of high civilization.
II.
The most desirable condition of the human
species, is a state of society.
The injustice and violence of men in a state of society,
produced the demand for government.
Government, as it was forced upon mankind by their vices, so has
it commonly been the creature of their ignorance and mistake.
Government was intended to suppress injustice, but it offers
new occasions and temptations for the commission of it.
By concentrating the force of the community, it gives occasion
to wild projects of calamity, to oppression, despotism, war, and
conquest.
By perpetuating and aggravating the inequality of property, it
fosters many injurious passions, and excites men to the practice of
robbery and fraud.
Government was intended to suppress injustice, but its effect
has been to embody and perpetuate it.
III.
The immediate object of government, is
security.
The means employed by government, is restriction, an
abridgement of individual independence.
The pleasures of self-approbation, together with the right
cultivation of all our pleasures, require individual independence.
Without independence men cannot become either wise, useful, or
happy.
Consequently, the most desirable state of mankind, is that
which maintains general security, with the smallest [e]ncroachment
upon individual independence.
IV.
The true standard of the conduct of one
man towards another is justice.
Justice is a principle which proposes to itself the production
of the greatest sum of pleasure or happiness.
Justice requires that I should put myself in the place of an
impartial spectator of human concerns, and divest myself of retrospect
to my own predilections.
Justice is a rule of the utmost universality, and prescribes a
specific mode of proceeding, in all affairs by which the happiness of
human beings may be affected.
V.
Duty is that mode of action, which
constitutes the best application of the capacity of the individual, to
the general advantage.
Right is the claim of the individual, to his share of the
benefit arising from his neighbors' discharge of their several duties.
The claim of the individual, is either to the exertion or the
forbearance of his neighbors.
The exertions of men in society should ordinarily be trusted to
their discretion; their forbearance, in certain cases, is a point of
more pressing necessity, and is the direct province of political
superintendence, or government.
VI.
The voluntary actions of men are under
the direction of their feelings.
Reason is not an independent principle, and has no tendency to
excite us to action; in a practical view, it is merely a comparison
and balancing of different feelings.
Reason, though it cannot excite us to action, is calculated to
regulate our conduct, according to the comparative worth it ascribes
to different excitements.
It is to the improvements of reason therefore, that we are to
look for the improvement of our social condition.
VII.
Reason depends for its clearness and
strength upon the cultivation of knowledge.
The extent of our progress in the cultivation of knowledge is
unlimited:
Hence it follows,
- That human inventions, and the modes of social existence, are
susceptible to perpetual improvement.
- That institutions calculated to give perpetuity to any
particular mode of thinking, or condition of existence, are
pernicious.
VIII.
The pleasures of intellectual feeling,
and the pleasures of self-approbation, together with the right
cultivation of all our pleasures, are connected with soundness of
understanding.
Soundness of understanding is inconsistent with prejudice:
consequently, as few falsehoods as possible, either speculative or
practical, should be fostered among mankind.
Soundness of understanding is connected with freedom of
enquiry: consequently, opinion should, as far as public security will
admit, be exempt from restraint.
Soundess of understanding is connected with simplicity of
manners, and leisure for intellectual cultivation: consequently, a
distribution of property extremely unequal, is adverse to the most
desirable state of man.