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    If D is true, then one of its disjuncts Dn must be true — Carmelics
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    Supports→Disjunction D entails moral statement E

    If D is true, then one of its disjuncts Dn must be true

    Modality & PossibilityPhilosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of LanguageModality & Possibility

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Moral Responsibility
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    Related

    Disjunction D entails moral statement EE cannot be false in any world described by Dn, because if E were false in a wor...The supervenience of the moral on the descriptive entails that there can be no m...Therefore E cannot be false whenever D is true

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    If E is true, then one of the disjuncts of D must be true98%If one disjunct is false, the remaining disjunct must be affirmed to s...87%Disjunction D contains a disjunct describing every world where E is tr...84%A real disjunction is exclusive, meaning both disjuncts cannot be true...83%

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    SEP: moral-epistemology-a-priori
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    Now, although it is an odd sentence—a very long disjunction—there is an important fact about D: it entails E and it is entailed by E. If E is true, then one of the disjuncts of D must be true, because D contains a disjunct describing every world where E is true; hence, D will be true as well. On the other hand, if D is true, then one of its disjuncts must be true, say it is Dn. E could not be false in a world described by Dn because Dn is included as a disjunct of D. Hence, if E were false in a

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