Abstract

Bentham’s Utilitarianism transforms earlier free speech doctrine in the service of the pursuit of truth and the control of government, preserving the distinction between statements of opinion and of fact and awarding the latter a lesser degree of protection. The work of James Mill and the early writings of John Stuart Mill retain this distinction, but their accounts are weighed down by the problems of a direct Utilitarian approach, in their consequentialist balancing of different values against each other, and in their dependence on a majoritarian epistemology and their commitment to a naive progressive optimism. Mill goes on in On Liberty to address and resolve these problems on the basis of a new justification for free speech as free deliberative thought. I argue that, contrary to most interpretations, his new justification leaves untouched the basic distinction between absolutely protected expressions of opinion and only functionally and contingently protected assertions of fact, leaving room for restrictions on factual statements, especially when untrue.

Highlights

  • In his account of John Stuart Mill’s life as a public intellectual, Richard Reeves relates the history of a failed campaign that appears to have briefly landed the 16-year-old Mill in prison

  • Mill had distributed controversial leaflets in a working-class neighbourhood, arguing for birth control and providing the necessary medical information: All animal procreation is the result of seminal contact between the sexes

  • In prosecuting a publication that turns against the moral standards of its day and, at the same time, provides the necessary medical information for people to take their lives into their own hands, state and police reveal their despotic character

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Summary

Journal of Bentham Studies

‘Speech, truth and liberty: Bentham to John Stuart Mill.’. Journal of Bentham Studies, 2019, 18(1), pp. Peer Review: This article has been peer reviewed through the journal’s standard double-blind peer-review, where both the reviewers and authors are anonymized during review. Open Access: Journal of Bentham Studies is a peer-reviewed open access journal

Classical Utilitarianism and Freedom of Speech
Of the Liberty of Thought and Discussion
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