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Buster Benson 5 years ago
At its most basic, this is a morality based on contracts about what should not b
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
The “source of truth” for contractualism is the perceived effect of the contract
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Lovely!
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
This is a highly pragmatic feature of this system.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Reinforces the point in the definition above... this is a subtractive moral phil
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
I wonder if that will turn out to be a flaw later on, or if it can also help us
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
This is a bit of a stretch for me but I see how it needs to be set up this way i
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
“principles they could not reasonably reject” smells fishy to me. How will diver
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
This gives hope.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
“do not” would seem more appropriate than “could not” to me.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Since that implies that the person was actually consulted for verification.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
First mention of members of a moral domain. I’m curious how that is determined.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
I can tell this will be confusing.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
This is a useful distinction!
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Worth pointing out at least one unquestioned axiom of contractualism: the agreements must be created with mutual respect for all parties. In this sense it seems extremely ambitious, since mutual respect of everyone seems to be one of the toughest moral principles to adopt. Can they get out of this pickle?
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Buster Benson 4 years ago
Thank goodness.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
I still feel wary of this appeal to a universal reason that everyone shares.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
A fascinating thought-experiment tool to help facilitate fair reasoning. I wonde
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Hmmm... interesting implications if a loss of faith in your ability to justify y
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
The source of truth is well-being, which is an incredibly difficult thing to gau
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Interesting! I wonder if this is because it is a subtractive morality.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
These are useful divergences from utilitarianism, I think.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Interesting way to frame the notion of burdens by taking into account the altern
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Interesting distinction here about the flexibility that emerges when the source
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Great example.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
I don’t quite get this.
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Buster Benson 5 years ago
Interesting framework. Relying on changes within implicit relationships as the s
- Contractualism
- May 30, 2020
- 1. What is contractualism?
- 2. How does contractualism differ from other social contract theories?
- For the contractualist, by contrast, agents are morally motivated by an intrinsic desire to justify themselves to others. Having this desire is part of what it is to be a moral agent.
- 3. How does contractualism differ from utilitarianism?
- 3.1 Reasonable Rejection
- 3.2 Reasons beyond well-being
- 4. How does contractualism differ from other non-consequentialist ethical theories?
- 4.1. The irrelevance of intent to permissibility
- 4.2. Blame and responsibility
- 5. The convergence argument
- 6. Is contractualism circular or redundant?
- 7. Is contractualism too tidy? (The pluralist challenge)
- 8. Can contractualism really avoid aggregation?
- 9. What does contractualism demand?
- The Rescue Principle:
- The Stringent Principle:
- 10. The contractualist account of substantive responsibility
- 11. How does contractualism deal with risk?
- 12. Can contractualism protect animals?
- 13. Can contractualism protect future people?
- Bibliography
NOTES / A form of morality based on evolving social contracts built up from an assumption ofequality.
1. What is contractualism?
2. How does contractualism differ from other social contract theories?
3. How does contractualism differ from utilitarianism?
3.1 Reasonable Rejection
3.2 Reasons beyond well-being
4. How does contractualism differ from other non-consequentialist ethical theories?
4.1. The irrelevance of intent to permissibility
4.2. Blame and responsibility
5. The convergence argument
6. Is contractualism circular or redundant?
7. Is contractualism too tidy? (The pluralist challenge)
8. Can contractualism really avoid aggregation?
9. What does contractualism demand?
10. The contractualist account of substantive responsibility
11. How does contractualism deal with risk?
12. Can contractualism protect animals?
13. Can contractualism protect future people?
Bibliography