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    Intervening coincidences, like intervening voluntary acts... — Carmelics
    Home/Consequentialism
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    Supports→When coincidences intervene in a causal chain, earlier acts in that chain are not considered proximate causes of the resulting harm.

    Intervening coincidences, like intervening voluntary acts, sever proximate causal attribution to prior acts.

    Consequentialism
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    Consequentialism

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    A coincidence (such as accidentally falling on the knives) intervenes in the cau...When coincidences intervene in a causal chain, earlier acts in that chain are no...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
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    One final solution to these epistemological problems deploys the legal notion of proximate cause. If consequentialists define consequences in terms of what is caused (unlike Sosa 1993), then which future events count as consequences is affected by which notion of causation is used to define consequences. Suppose I give a set of steak knives to a friend. Unforeseeably, when she opens my present, the decorative pattern on the knives somehow reminds her of something horrible that her husband did. T

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