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    Two wrong acts are not 'worse' than one in any normativel... — Carmelics
    Home/Consequentialism
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    Supports→Wrong acts on a deontological account cannot be translated into bad states of affairs that are subject to aggregation.

    Two wrong acts are not 'worse' than one in any normatively significant sense.

    Consequentialism
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    Consequentialism

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    Wrong acts on a deontological account cannot be translated into bad states of af...Wrongs of this kind cannot be summed into anything of normative significance.

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    An intention is wrongful when the act intended is itself wrong, not th...

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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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