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    Being the source of one's life and nurturance grounds a s... — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→The intuitive judgment that parents are owed more concern than others has great plausibility

    Being the source of one's life and nurturance grounds a stronger obligation of concern

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Parents are the source of one's life and nurturanceThe intuitive judgment that parents are owed more concern than others has great ...

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    Parents are owed special concern in virtue of being the source of one'...91%Parents are the source of one's life and nurturance81%People are owed concern in virtue of their being human77%Universalist concern is concern for another simply as a human being, i...74%

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    SEP: ethics-chinese
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    Two issues arise from this response to Mohism as he understood it (whether he understood it correctly will be addressed in section 3). One issue is whether Mencius has sufficient warrant to trust the kinds of intuitive judgments he attributes to human nature. Mencius holds that the beginnings of morality are sent by Heaven, but in the absence of such a metaphysical warrant, can these intuitive judgments be accepted, particularly the ones that underwrite care with distinctions? Doubt about the me

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