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    An allowing occurs when one's action merely removes a def... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Mercy-killings (euthanasia) are outside of deontological obligations and thus eligible for justification by good consequences

    An allowing occurs when one's action merely removes a defense the victim otherwise would have had against death

    Consequentialism
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    An allowing occurs only when such removal returns the victim to some morally app...Mercy-killings (euthanasia) are outside of deontological obligations and thus el...Mercy-killings qualify as allowings when the agent removes only a defense agains...Mercy-killings qualify as allowings when the equipment could justifiably have be...

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    Mercy-killings qualify as allowings when the agent removes only a defe...87%An allowing occurs only when such removal returns the victim to some m...86%Mercy-killings qualify as allowings when the equipment could justifiab...79%If one cannot act so as to fulfill an intention to kill, the obligator...74%

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    SEP: ethics-deontological
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    Second, causings are distinguished from allowings. In a narrow sense of the word we will here stipulate, one allows a death to occur when: (1) one’s action merely removes a defense the victim otherwise would have had against death; and (2) such removal returns the victim to some morally appropriate baseline (Kamm 1994, 1996; MacMahan 2003). Thus, mercy-killings, or euthanasia, are outside of our deontological obligations (and thus eligible for justification by good consequences) so long as one’s

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