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    Employing a maxim embodies the form of means-end reasoning. — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Anything that counts as human willing is subject to rational requirements.

    Employing a maxim embodies the form of means-end reasoning.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Free Will & Foreknowledge2 linked

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    Consequentialism
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    Anything that counts as human willing is subject to rational requirements.For anything to count as human willing, it must be based on a maxim to pursue so...Means-end reasoning calls for evaluation in terms of hypothetical imperatives.

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    The maxim 'I will make lying promises when it achieves something I wan...77%Self-evident axioms (such as the Kantian maxim) cannot serve as the ba...76%Means-end reasoning calls for evaluation in terms of hypothetical impe...74%If a maxim passes the contradiction in conception test but fails the c...73%

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    SEP: kant-moral
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    Kant describes the will as operating on the basis of subjective volitional principles he calls “maxims”. Hence, morality and other rational requirements are, for the most part, demands that apply to the maxims that we act on. . The form of a maxim is “I will A in C in order to realize or produce E” where “A” is some act type, “C” is some type of circumstance, and “E” is some type of end to be realized or achieved by A in C. Since this is a principle stating only what some agent wills, it is subj

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