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    An action can be regarded as good because it benefits the... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→To rationally choose any action, an agent must regard themselves as valuable.

    An action can be regarded as good because it benefits the agent or satisfies a genuine need or desire of the agent.

    ConsequentialismVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsConsequentialism

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    Moral Responsibility4 linked

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    Browse more in Virtue Ethics
    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    If the agent did not value themselves, satisfying the agent's needs or desires c...Regarding something as good because it benefits the agent presupposes that the a...To rationally choose an action, the agent must regard that action as good in som...To rationally choose any action, an agent must regard themselves as valuable.

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    An action can only be regarded as good if it has intrinsic value, sati...94%To rationally choose an action, the agent must regard that action as g...87%Regarding something as good because it benefits the agent presupposes ...85%Desire-satisfaction alone is not a sufficient basis for regarding an a...83%

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    AI-extracted
    SEP: transcendental-arguments
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    Consider this example. To rationally choose to eat this piece of chocolate cake, I must think that eating the cake is good in some way. How can I regard it as good? It seems implausible to say that eating the cake is good in itself, of intrinsic value. It also seems implausible to say that it is good just because it satisfies a desire as such: for even if I was bulimic it might do that, but still not be regarded as good. A third suggestion, then, is that it can be seen as good because it is good

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