There were other activists at the same time who were speaking out against the caste system in its entirety. Gandhi was viewed by the British as a sort of compromise, a way to appease the Indian people without completely altering the social structure that they had manipulated to remain in power. Thus, they quickly (relatively) conceded to Gandhi, so that they would not be blamed for destroying the caste structure.PainRack wrote:While Gandhi was certainly weird, this is not one of them.Darth Wong wrote:I wouldn't go so far as to even call that approach "half-enlightened". More like "fucking ignorant". But Gandhi is considered a saint, so it gets shoved under the carpet. It's often quite surprising what dirt can be dug up on a typical saint (Mother Theresa being another example).Durran Korr wrote:Gandhi took a "half-enlightened" approach to the caste system. He believed that the lower castes should have been treated humanely but accepted the fact that they were inferior scum by birthright.
While Gandhi did support the caste system, he was also the supporter of the Untouchable caste, insisting that they had a place in India and were entitled to the rights of a citizen.
And DW, if the acid-melted men you were talking about were the ones from National Geographic, they were fishing in the wrong pond. The pictures were very disturbing.
About Utilitarianism: Mill did refer to Bentham's theory as "a doctrine worthy only of swine," in Chapter 2 of Utilitarianism, first published in 1863. He was altering the theory so that the class of pleasure mattered as much as the degree of pleasure, thus making something pleasurable and refined more valuable than something pleasurable and base.