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    The premise that contributions 'discharge' obligations mi... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The aged or others who have already made substantial contributions to societal welfare would be morally permitted to engage in suicide

    The premise that contributions 'discharge' obligations misrepresents the web of ongoing relational duties that persist regardless of prior service rendered.

    ?Rate how convincing each reason is below to see the overall strength.
    1 reason for
    1 reason against

    Reasons For

    1 perspective
    Reason for
    ?
    • 1.Relationships are fundamentally ongoing; they don't reset after single acts. Prior contributions cannot logically terminate future relational responsibilities.
      ?

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    • 2.Viewing contributions as 'discharge' enables exploitation: stronger parties claim debts are settled and withdraw support, abandoning vulnerable dependents.
      ?

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    • 3.Moral duties arising from relationships (parent-child, community membership) are unconditional and renewal-based, not transactional ledgers.
      ?

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    Reasons Against

    1 perspective
    Reason against
    ?
    • 1.Without some notion of discharged obligations, reciprocity becomes impossible; parties cannot know when they've fulfilled their share of mutual duties.
      ?

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    • 2.Endless relational duties without discharge risk obligating people to aid those who actively harm them, negating autonomy and justified boundary-setting.
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    • 3.Some relationships ARE appropriately terminated (contracts, temporary partnerships); claiming all duties persist indefinitely conflates distinct obligation types.
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    Afterlife & Death1 linked

    Related

    Endless relational duties without discharge risk obligating people to aid those ...Moral duties arising from relationships (parent-child, community membership) are...Relationships are fundamentally ongoing; they don't reset after single acts. Pri...Some relationships ARE appropriately terminated (contracts, temporary partnershi...
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    The aged or others who have already made substantial contributions to societal w...Viewing contributions as 'discharge' enables exploitation: stronger parties clai...Without some notion of discharged obligations, reciprocity becomes impossible; p...

    Details

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    claim
    Perspectives
    2 (1 for, 1 against)
    Edits
    1 edit