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    The expected-utility principle requires all relevant cons... — Carmelics
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    Home/Consequentialism
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    Supports→If an agent is averse to risk, the risk generated by a risky act must be included in each of that act's possible outcomes

    The expected-utility principle requires all relevant considerations to be included in outcomes

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    Consequentialism

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    The expected-utility principle requires that outcomes include every re...97%Outcomes in expected-utility calculations must include every relevant ...86%The expected utility criterion does not necessarily follow from utilit...83%Savage's work formally completed expected utility theory (EUT)81%

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    One issue concerning outcomes is their comprehensiveness. Are an act’s outcomes possible worlds, temporal aftermaths, or causal consequences? Gibbard and Harper ([1978] 1981: 166–168) mention the possibility of narrowing outcomes to causal consequences, as practical applicability advocates. The narrowing must be judicious, however, because the expected-utility principle requires that outcomes include every relevant consideration. For example, if an agent is averse to risk, then each of a risky a

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