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    Prima facie obligations may be overridden by other obliga... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→It is not an objection to meaning-engendered (ME) normativity that there are situations in which "green" means green for S without S being obligated to apply "green" only to green objects.

    Prima facie obligations may be overridden by other obligations (such as the obligation in a certain context to tell a lie).

    Moral ResponsibilityPhilosophy of Language
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    Moral ResponsibilityPhilosophy of Language

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    It is not an objection to meaning-engendered (ME) normativity that there are sit...Semantic obligations are merely prima facie.

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    Another strand in the discussion of the simple argument concerns the status of the relevant semantic obligations. Here it is often emphasized that semantic obligations are merely prima facie and may be overridden by other obligations, such as the obligation (in a certain context) to tell a lie. It is therefore not an objection to ME normativity that there are situations in which “green” means green for \(S\), without it being the case that \(S\) ought to apply “green” to green objects only (Whit

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