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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    There is no interpersonally justifiable way to rank ends ... — Carmelics
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    Home/Justice & Punishment
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    Supports→No choice between competing ends can be interpersonally justified.

    There is no interpersonally justifiable way to rank ends against one another.

    Justice & PunishmentVirtue Ethics
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    Justice & PunishmentVirtue Ethics

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    Modality & Possibility2 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Moral Responsibility
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    Consequentialism1 linked
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    Incommensurable ends cannot all be achieved simultaneously.No choice between competing ends can be interpersonally justified.The pursuit of one end necessarily means other ends will not be achieved.Values and ends are plural.

    Similar

    Discerning truths about particular ends is insufficient to determine w...73%Friendship must be a relationship among equals.72%Happiness is the highest end for a human being.71%Treating something as an end-in-itself does not permit respect that va...70%

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    SEP: liberalism
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    In his famous defence of negative liberty, Berlin insisted that values or ends are plural, and further, the pursuit of one end necessarily implies that other ends will not be achieved. In this sense ends collide. In economic terms, the pursuit of one end entails opportunity costs: foregone pursuits which cannot be impersonally shown to be less worthy. There is no interpersonally justifiable way to rank the ends, and no way to achieve them all. Each person must devote herself to some ends at the

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