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    The utilitarian principle nevertheless expresses a genuin... — Carmelics
    Home/Consequentialism
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    Supports→The utilitarian principle is synthetic and known a priori via intuition

    The utilitarian principle nevertheless expresses a genuine normative truth

    ConsequentialismTruth & Knowledge
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    ConsequentialismTruth & Knowledge

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    Synthetic normative truths that are not empirical must be known via intuitionThe open question argument rules out analytic definitions of 'right'The utilitarian principle is synthetic and known a priori via intuition

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    Secondary moral principles provide support for utilitarianism rather t...85%The utilitarian principle is synthetic and known a priori via intuitio...82%Secondary moral principles can be established that reliably track util...80%Reflective equilibrium explicitly seeks to arrive at acceptable normat...80%

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    SEP: moral-epistemology-a-priori
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    Moore did not hold that all moral knowledge is intuitive. In the Principia he maintained that the utilitarian principle was analytic, hence, knowledge of this principle would not require a special intuition. But he later acknowledged that one cannot define “right”, because the open question argument can be used against definitions of “right”, including the utilitarian definition. (“This action produces the most good consequences, but is it right?” is an open question. Corresponding open question

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