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    An appropriate authority can say 'I christen this ship' o... — Carmelics
    Home/Forgiveness & Mercy
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    Supports→The utterance 'I forgive you', understood as a declarative, makes it the case that one has been forgiven, thereby altering the operative norms governing the interaction between victim and wrongdoer.

    An appropriate authority can say 'I christen this ship' or 'I hereby find you guilty' and thereby make it so.

    Forgiveness & Mercy
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    Forgiveness & Mercy

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    Declarative utterances have the effect of changing reality in various ways.Much like one can declare a debt forgiven or a criminal pardoned, one can declar...The utterance 'I forgive you', understood as a declarative, makes it the case th...

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    Much like one can declare a debt forgiven or a criminal pardoned, one ...69%It would be fitting for Todd to blame Alfred, and for Alfred to apolog...65%Betty has direct standing to forgive Alfred.65%One may harbor moral anger towards a wrongdoer without thereby wishing...65%

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    Used as a declarative, utterances or expressions may have the effect of (to put it crudely) changing reality in various ways. An appropriate authority might, for example, say, “I christen this ship”, or “I hereby find you guilty”. By making such an utterance, one is actually able to make it so that a ship is christened or that one is found guilty. Understood as a declarative, the utterance “I forgive you” (or one of its cognates) makes it the case that one has been forgiven, thereby altering the operative norms governing the interaction between victim and wrongdoer (Warmke 2016a, 2016b). Much ...

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