- Hastings Rashdall
Hastings Rashdall (1858–1924) was an English philosopher who expounded a theory known as ideal
utilitarianism .Son of an
Anglican priest, he was educated at Harrow and received a scholarship for New College,Oxford . After short tenures atSt David's University College andUniversity College, Durham , Rashdall was made a Fellow ofNew College, Oxford , and dedicates his main work, [http://fair-use.org/hastings-rashdall/the-theory-of-good-and-evil/ "The Theory of Good and Evil"] , to the memory of his teachersThomas Hill Green andHenry Sidgwick . The dedication is appropriate, for the particular version of utilitarianism put forward by Rashdall owes elements to both Green and Sidgwick. Whereas he holds that the concepts of good and value are logically prior to that of right, he gives right a more than instrumental significance. His idea of good owes more to Green than to the hedonistic utilitarians. "The ideal of human life is not the mere juxtaposition of distinct goods, but a whole in which each good is made different by the presence of others." Rashdall has been eclipsed as a moral philosopher byG. E. Moore , who advocated similar views in his earlier work "Principia Ethica ".He was president of the
Aristotelian Society from 1904 to 1907, a member of theChristian Social Union from its inception in 1890, and was an influentialAnglican modernist theologian of the time, being appointed to a canonry in 1909.Works Online
* [http://fair-use.org/hastings-rashdall/the-theory-of-good-and-evil/ "The Theory of Good and Evil"] (1907)
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