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    Humans are most adapted to rational moral contemplation — Carmelics
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    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→Humans ought to employ reason in the pursuit of morality

    Humans are most adapted to rational moral contemplation

    Virtue Ethics
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    Nature points humans toward rational moral inquiry
    One ought to follow the direction of nature where it points out the way

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    Even persons who pursue theoretical contemplation as their highest goo...78%Nature points humans toward rational moral inquiry76%Agency is constituted by norms of rationality and morality.75%Human beings are sensuous as well as rational creatures and need sensu...75%

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    Locke, in fact, adds something of a meta-moral dimension to this epistemological point by suggesting that as rational beings it is our “proper Imployment” to contemplate morality. In Book IV of the Essay, where Locke concludes that morality is, like mathematics, a human science (and, properly-speaking, knowledge), Locke draws a teleological lesson—since we are clearly fitted with the capacity for discerning our moral duty, then that is what we ought to do: “I think I may conclude, that Morality

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