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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    A genuine natural motive for just acts must always be sat... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Self-interest cannot serve as the natural, non-moral motive for just acts.

    A genuine natural motive for just acts must always be satisfied by just acts and must be the kind of motive approved when we call a trait a virtue.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Self-interest cannot serve as the natural, non-moral motive for just acts.Self-interest is not always satisfied by just acts.Self-interest is not approved in the way traits we call virtues generally are.

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    A genuine natural motive for just acts must consistently motivate comp...86%Benevolence cannot serve as the natural, non-moral motive for just act...83%Hume requires that the motive for morally good actions be non-moral an...83%Every morally good action must have a natural, non-moral motive.83%

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    SEP: kant-hume-morality
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    According to the Treatise, artificial virtues include justice, fidelity to promises, allegiance to government, and chastity. Hume devotes much discussion to justice, which he treats as a paramount and paradigmatic artificial virtue. Hume understands justice primarily as honesty with respect to property or conformity to conventions of property (T 3.2.2.28). Establishing a system of property allows us to avoid conflict and enjoy the possession and use of various goods. The social value of conventi

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