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    Making a promise under a just institution means accepting... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

    Part of a larger discussion

    Supports→A person who makes a promise under a just promising institution is obligated to keep that promise.

    Making a promise under a just institution means accepting the benefits of that institution.

    Moral ResponsibilitySocial Contract
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    Moral ResponsibilitySocial Contract

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    2 topics

    Virtue Ethics1 linked

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    Justice & Punishment
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    Related

    A person who makes a promise under a just promising institution is obligated to ...The principle of fairness forbids free-riding on just cooperative institutions.To break a promise while others uphold their promises is to free-ride on the ins...

    Similar

    A person who makes a promise under a just promising institution is obl...83%To break a promise while others uphold their promises is to free-ride ...79%A promise is only a bona fide promise if the practice of promising tha...77%The rule of promising defines an institutional practice.76%

    Source

    AI-extracted
    SEP: promises
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    Thus Rawls’ explanation for the obligatory force of promises is roughly: If you make a promise under a just promising institution, then you are obligated to uphold that institution (and obey its rules) because to do otherwise would be to “free-ride” on the institution in a manner forbidden by the principle of fairness.

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