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    One can desire something and hence act without thinking t... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Challenges→The argument that action presupposes moral judgment is unconvincing.

    One can desire something and hence act without thinking the object of desire is good.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Non-human animals act on desire without employing the vocabulary of good and evi...The argument that action presupposes moral judgment is unconvincing.The precondition of action is desire, not desire framed in normative terms.

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    A desire represents a specific act (F-ing) as worthwhile or attractive...84%We desire things because we think those things are independently good,...83%Therefore, the object of desire cannot be pleasure, which means desire...83%Akrasia (acting against one's better judgment) is possible because som...83%

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    SEP: russell-moral
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    “Ethical Axioms” (1894) was the last piece that Russell wrote for Sidgwick’s course on ethics (RoE: 53–56/Papers 1: 226–228). Russell takes it as a datum that “we do make moral judgments” and that “we regard these, like judgments as to what is, as liable to truth and falsehood”. We are “precluded from skepticism” (presumably the view that moral judgments are all false) “by the mere fact we will and act”. (This is not a very convincing argument since I can desire something—and hence act—without t

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