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Jeremy Bentham

Personal Information

Born February 15, 1748
Died June 6, 1832 (84 years old)
Houndsditch, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Also known as: Bentham, Jeremy, JEREMY BENTHAM
82 books
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72 readers

Description

An English jurist, philosopher, and legal and social reformer. He is best known for his advocacy of utilitarianism and animal rights, and the idea of the panopticon. (Source: Wikipedia.)

Books

Newest First

Jeremy Bentham's Auto-Icon and Related Writings

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A collection of works about and by Jeremy Bentham relating to his preserved and displayed remains known as the "Auto-Icon."

A Fragment on Government

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This volume makes available one of the central texts in the development of utilitarian tradition, in the authoritative 1977 edition prepared by Professors Burns and Hart as part of Bentham's Collected Works. Certain that history was on his side, Bentham sought to rid the world of the hideous mess wrought by legal obfuscation and confusion, and to transform politics into a rational, scientific activity, premised on the fundamental axiom that "it is the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of right and wrong.

The Correspondence of Jeremy Bentham: Volume 8

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Jeremy Bentham was a British philosopher, jurist, and social reformer. He is regarded as the founder of modern utilitarianism. Bentham became a leading theorist in Anglo-American philosophy of law, and a political radical whose ideas influenced the development of welfarism. He advocated individual and economic freedom, the separation of church and state, freedom of expression, equal rights for women, the right to divorce, and the decriminalising of homosexual acts. He called for the abolition of slavery, the abolition of the death penalty, and the abolition of physical punishment, including that of children. He has also become known in recent years as an early advocate of animal rights. Though strongly in favour of the extension of individual legal rights, he opposed the idea of natural law and natural rights, calling them "nonsense upon stilts."