John Stuart Mill was the great exponent of individual liberty and Representative Democracy. He was a high priest of Individualism. The central theme of Mill's political theory is individual liberty and representative.
John Stuart Mill was born on May 20, 1806 in London. He was he eldest son of his father James Mill who was the disciple of Bentham. J.S. Mill started the learning of Greek language at the age of three and then Latin at the age of eight. As a young boy of twelve, he had studied the philosophy of some of the great philosophers, such as Plato, Herodotus, Homer, Aristotle and Thucydides. He also learned French language and acquired a great fluency.
He wrote following books:
MILL'S VIEWS ON INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY :
J.S. Mill is universally regarded as a passionate advocate of liberty. He vigorously whispered for imparting great importance to individual liberty and emphasized that governmental interference in individual activity should be reduced to the minimum. In the middle of the 19th century, due to the utilitarian reforms, the scope of administrative activities increased . Parliament became the supreme and unchallenged law-making authority, who enacted such laws which vividly obstructed individual liberty. With the imposition of increasing state regulations, human activities were suffocated and he firmly believed that liberty was a prime factor for the development of the society. At that time, policy of laissez-faire was being abandoned in favour of greater regulations by the state. The people became politically conscious and demanded universal suffrage.
When Mill wrote , utilitarian liberalism was generally accepted in England. The democratic efforts made by the earlier utilitarian had been largely successful and political power had been extended to a considerable proportion of the population. A large number of old evils and inequalities had been removed. In this process, some of the dangers of democracy became visible, and the tendency toward state centralization led political theory to the scope of state activities and to the liberty of the individual. The leader in the intellectual life of the period was J.S. Mill.
Mill apprehended that the growth of democracy and the increasing legislative powers of the state tended to reduce individuals to a common type and to swamp them in the tyranny of collectivism. He believed that social progress could not be achieved if each and every individual is imparted with fuller opportunity for free development of his personality. Mill favoured freedom of thought speech and action. He believed in toleration of opinions and unhampered freedom of discussion. He had confidence that truth would definitely survive in the struggle of ideas.
FREEDOM OF THE INIDIVIDUAL :
Originality in conduct and thought are essentially basic features efforting towards social welfare. When individuality is quelled by the law of a monarch or an aristocrat, the evil of it may be counteracted by the custom of the masses, but when the masses make the law of repression, custom unites with legislation to confirm the evil. Individual development enriches the world by a variety of characters. But the imposes two limitations on this liberty:
The individual was not at liberty to do any harm of his fellow beings.
He must share labours and sacrifices to secure the society or individuals against harm.
Mill pleads for certain freedoms for the individual without which he cannot develop his personality properly. These are :
Mill laid great stress on liberty of thought and expression. Mill's theory of liberty of the individual is based upon three essential elements:
Important Points of Mill's Individual Liberty :
CRITICISM :
Mill was bitterly criticized because of his inconsistencies on the doctrine of liberty at the hands of Earnest Barker who said, " Mill was the prophet of an empty and an abstract individual."
Mill's theory was criticized on the following ground: