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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    Statements
    321,452
    Perspectives
    108,905
    Topics
    42
    Justice is a contract among humans to avoid suffering har... — Carmelics
    Home/Justice & Punishment
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

    Connected to 2 discussions

    Supports→Injustice is bad because of the fear arising from the expectation of punishment, not because injustice is intrinsically bad.
    Supports→Justice, understood as the rules governing human intercourse, is grounded in the need to avoid distress.

    Justice is a contract among humans to avoid suffering harm from one another.

    Justice & PunishmentSocial Contract
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    Justice & PunishmentSocial Contract

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    4 topics

    Consequentialism3 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Virtue Ethics
    2 linked
    Skepticism1 linked
    Moral Responsibility1 linked

    Related

    Avoiding distress is the fundamental motivation in Epicurean moral psychology.Injustice is bad because of the fear arising from the expectation of punishment,...Injustice produces fear and distress in the wrongdoer.It is impossible for someone who violates the compact to be confident of escapin...
    +3 moreShow less
    Justice, understood as the rules governing human intercourse, is grounded in the...Living in fear of punishment constitutes a form of distress.One who violates the compact lives in fear of being detected and punished.

    Similar

    Justice, understood as the rules governing human intercourse, is groun...77%Morality is a necessary means to long-term survival, but does not requ...76%A contract that replicates the insecurity of the state of nature fails...76%There is a duty of right to act towards others so that external, usabl...76%

    Source

    AI-extracted
    SEP: ethics-ancient
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    At this point, we can see that Epicurus has so refined the account of pleasure and pain that he is able to tie them to virtue. In the Letter to Menoeceus, he claims, as a truth for which he does not argue, that virtue and pleasure are inseparable and that living a prudent, honorable, and just life is the necessary and sufficient means to the pleasure that is the end of life (132). An example of what he might mean is found in Principal Doctrines, where Epicurus holds that justice is a contract am

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