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    The actions of Lincoln made the world better than it woul... — Carmelics
    Home/Consequentialism
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    Challenges→Objective meaning in life does not require immortality

    The actions of Lincoln made the world better than it would have been absent those actions

    Consequentialism
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    Consequentialism

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    Virtue Ethics1 linkedAfterlife & Death1 linked

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    Increasing the balance of objective value (good) to disvalue (evil) can make a r...Objective meaning in life does not require immortalityThe achievement of good works, or the mitigation of suffering and pain, can resu...

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    One has no less a reason to act for the good of anyone and everyone el...74%When human actions are rectified and pleasing to the gods, calamities ...73%A good that can make one act badly is not unconditionally good.72%Virtuous action is grounded in the highest end for a human being.72%

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    SEP: pragmatic-belief-god
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    This argument rests on several controversial assumptions. For one, the argument assumes that a divine conferral of purpose is necessary for one’s life to have meaning and purpose. Presumably, the idea is that a self-conferral of purpose would be arbitrary and limited by human ignorance or uncertainty as to what is genuinely worthwhile. A conferral by God, however, would not be arbitrary as God would confer only a purpose that is objectively worthwhile. Another assumption is that objective meanin

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