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    The argument from self-valuation requires one to find som... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Challenges→The argument from self-valuation may lead to self-conceit, where an individual concludes they are supremely valuable simply as a particular individual person.

    The argument from self-valuation requires one to find something valuable about oneself.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Concluding one is supremely valuable as a particular individual could interfere ...If what is found valuable is particular to the individual rather than general, t...The argument from self-valuation may lead to self-conceit, where an individual c...

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    There are some dangers in this argument, however. One, which Korsgaard considers, is that it might lead to ‘self-conceit’ (Korsgaard 1998: 54. Cf. also Korsgaard 1996: 249–50): that is, I might conclude from this that I am supremely valuable, simply as Bob Stern, which could obviously then get in the way of my ethical treatment of others. But, this worry might be lessened by the thought that while the argument gets me to see that I must find something valuable about me, it need not be anything a

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