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    Taking a human life is vicious in general, yet may be vir... — Carmelics
    Home/Justice & Punishment
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    Supports→Virtuous action cannot be determined by fixed moral absolutes but requires attention to circumstance

    Taking a human life is vicious in general, yet may be virtuous as a form of punishment or in a justly fought battle

    Justice & PunishmentVirtue Ethics
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    Justice & PunishmentVirtue Ethics

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    SEP: john-salisbury
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    To determine the virtuous mean in any specific circumstance, John advances an essentially Ciceronian standard: “Discretion with regard to time, place, amount, person and cause readily draws the proper distinction” between virtuous and vicious actions. Indeed, one might understand John to advocate a sort of circumstantialist—though by no means relativist—moral theory, since discretion “is the origin and source of moderation in its widest sense without which no duty is properly performed” (FCP: 37

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