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    Since we will the necessary and available means to our en... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→We are forbidden from adopting the maxim of refusing to develop any of our own natural talents.

    Since we will the necessary and available means to our ends, we are rationally committed to willing that everyone sometime develop their talents.

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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Developed talents are necessary means to achieving happiness.Rationality requires conformity to hypothetical imperatives, so rational agents ...We are forbidden from adopting the maxim of refusing to develop any of our own n...We cannot will as a universal law of nature that no one ever develop any talents...

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    We must will our own happiness as an end.

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    Insofar as we are rational, we necessarily will that all of our talent...87%Given limitations on our time, energy and interest, it is difficult to...76%All that is required to show that one cannot will a talentless world i...74%Egoism is irrational and we should work for the benefit of all sentien...74%

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    SEP: kant-moral
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    Finally, Kant’s examples come on the heels of defending the position that rationality requires conformity to hypothetical imperatives. Thus, we should assume that, necessarily, rational agents will the necessary and available means to any ends that they will. And once we add this to the assumptions that we must will our own happiness as an end, and that developed talents are necessary means to achieving that end, it follows that we cannot rationally will that a world come about in which it is a

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