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    Causing harm is always a non-negligible reason to regulat... — Carmelics
    Home/Justice & Punishment
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    Supports→Causing harm provides a pro tanto reason to regulate an action, but this reason may be outweighed by countervailing reasons not to regulate

    Causing harm is always a non-negligible reason to regulate an action

    Justice & PunishmentRights & Liberty
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    Justice & PunishmentRights & Liberty

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    A pro tanto reason can be outweighed by stronger countervailing considerationsCausing harm provides a pro tanto reason to regulate an action, but this reason ...If regulation is more harmful than the behavior being regulated, the pro tanto c...

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    Causing harm provides a pro tanto reason to regulate an action, but th...88%The harm principle cannot be equated with permitting regulation of all...86%Whether restrictions on harmful conduct are fully justified depends on...84%Mill requires only that an action risks harm, not that harm is certain...83%

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    AI-extracted
    SEP: mill-moral-political
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    This suggests that Mill’s position is that causing harm is always pro tanto reason—a non-negligible reason—to regulate the action, but nonetheless a reason that might be outweighed by countervailing reasons not to regulate. If the regulation is more harmful than the behavior in question, it may be best not to regulate, despite the pro tanto case for regulation. This suggests that we should distinguish stronger and weaker versions of the idea that harm is sufficient to justify regulation.

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