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    The separateness of persons prevents treating harms to di... — Carmelics
    Home/Consequentialism
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    Supports→A wrong to one person and a wrong to another person cannot be added together to constitute a single greater wrong.

    The separateness of persons prevents treating harms to different individuals as summable.

    Consequentialism
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    Consequentialism

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    A wrong to one person and a wrong to another person cannot be added together to ...There is no person who suffers the alleged 'greater' combined wrong.Wrongs are wrongs only to specific persons.

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    Harms to two persons cannot be combined into a single aggregate harm e...81%The separateness of persons objection depends on a hard-and-fast metap...78%Not every case of harm prevention is a case of preventing one person f...77%Every case of preventing one person from harming another is a case of ...76%

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    Patient-centered deontologies are thus arguably better construed to be agent-relative in the reasons they give. Even so construed, such deontologies join agent-centered deontologies in facing the moral (rather than the conceptual) versions of the paradox of deontology. For a critic of either form of deontology might respond to the categorical prohibition about using others as follows: If usings are bad, then are not more usings worse than fewer? And if so, then is it not odd to condemn acts that

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