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    Placing oneself in the situation of those one has injured... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→A person who injures others acts inconsistently if they approve of their own injurious actions

    Placing oneself in the situation of those one has injured reveals that being treated injuriously would not merely anger one but would seem unfitting or undeserved

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    A person who injures others acts inconsistently if they approve of their own inj...Approving of treating others in ways one would not wish to be treated oneself is...

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    Suicide does not constitute treating oneself unjustly75%A cruel response may be exactly what circumstances call for74%Consensual harm to oneself cannot be an injustice done to oneself73%A person who injures others acts inconsistently if they approve of the...73%

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    SEP: edwards
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    Conscience, for instance, is the product of a power of placing ourselves in the situation of others (which is needed for any sort of mutual understanding), a sense of the natural fitness of certain responses (injury and punishment or disapproval, benefit and reward or approval), and self-love. Placing ourselves in the situation of those we have injured, we recognize that being treated in that way would not merely anger us but seem unfitting or undeserved, and that we are therefore inconsistent i

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