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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    One loves what one has procreated in the same way one lov... — Carmelics
    Home/Personal Identity
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    Supports→A friend is one's 'another self' because one is causally responsible for one's friend coming to have and sustain virtues, making one the friend's 'procreator' and thereby finding oneself actualized in the friend.

    One loves what one has procreated in the same way one loves oneself.

    Personal IdentityVirtue Ethics
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    Personal IdentityVirtue Ethics

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    Browse more in Personal Identity
    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    A friend is one's 'another self' because one is causally responsible for one's f...Being causally responsible for another's virtues makes one a kind of 'procreator...Finding oneself actualized in another grounds a form of self-love directed at th...In mirroring a friend, one is causally responsible for the friend coming to have...

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    Self-love implies an inclination to feel and act as one with oneself76%A person cannot conceive of their own flourishing without conceiving o...76%Recognizing this sameness requires extending love to all beautiful bod...75%One acts as procreator only of this particular person by mirroring and...75%

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    In an interesting twist on standard accounts of the sense in which (according to Aristotle, at least) a friend is a mirror, Millgram (1987) claims that in mirroring my friend I am causally responsible for my friend coming to have and sustain the virtues he has. Consequently, I am in a sense my friend’s “procreator,” and I therefore find myself actualized in my friend. For this reason, Millgram claims, I come to love my friend in the same way I love myself, and this explains (a) Aristotle’s other

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