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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    A stranger who steals my bag is someone I can intuitively... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

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    Supports→Contractualist blame can apply to total strangers, not only those within close personal relationships

    A stranger who steals my bag is someone I can intuitively blame

    Justice & PunishmentMoral Responsibility
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    Moral ResponsibilityJustice & Punishment

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    Social Contract4 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Contractualist blame can apply to total strangers, not only those within close p...Contractualist blame requires a relationship as its groundScanlon affirms that we do have such a relationship with every total strangerTherefore, we must have some relationship with every total stranger whom it make...

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    Many cases of wrongdoing involve strangers (e.g., most car thefts, whe...72%Contractualist blame can apply to total strangers, not only those with...70%Therefore, we must have some relationship with every total stranger wh...70%Even if there is some relationship between a victim and the stranger w...66%

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    SEP: contractualism
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    Contractualist blame thus only makes sense within a relationship, such as friendship or family relationships. Impairment must be judged against the standard of what is appropriate within that relationship. This raises an obvious problem. What relationship could possibly ground judgements of blameworthiness and reactions of blame in the general moral case? Suppose a stranger steals my bag as I walk down the street. Intuitively, I can blame her. But what is my relationship to her? “Do we have a re

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