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    Excessive self-interest introduces a narrowness of spirit... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Challenges→Stressing reward and punishment cannot make people more virtuous, and may make them less so

    Excessive self-interest introduces a narrowness of spirit incompatible with virtue

    Virtue Ethics
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    Virtue Ethics

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    Social Contract1 linkedConsequentialism1 linked

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    Morality and self-interest coincide, reuniting Practical Reason with i...79%Excessive self-interest insensibly diminishes affections towards publi...78%Self-interest is not approved in the way traits we call virtues genera...78%Another account holds that mere contemplation of self-interest is inad...78%

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    SEP: shaftesbury
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    People who dwell on reward and punishment are more likely to become overly concerned with their own “Self-good, and private Interest,” which must “insensibly diminish the Affections towards publick Good, or the Interest of Society and introduce a certain Narrowness of spirit” (C 2.58). Stressing reward and punishment cannot make people more virtuous, and it may very well make them less so (C 1.97–98, 2.52–56). It is for this reason that Shaftesbury has one of his characters in The Moralists say

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