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    Universalist concern is concern for another simply as a h... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Universalist concern alone is insufficient as a complete account of moral value in relationships.

    Universalist concern is concern for another simply as a human being, independent of any special connection.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Consequentialism2 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    The moral value of friendship requires concern for another for his sake and as t...These two forms of concern are distinct, and the latter cannot substitute for th...Universalist concern alone is insufficient as a complete account of moral value ...

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    People are owed concern in virtue of their being human86%Friendship essentially involves concern for the other for the other's ...85%To explain concern for a friend for her sake, Friedman's view appeals ...84%Love essentially involves a concern for the beloved for the beloved's ...81%

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    Blum (1980) (portions of which are reprinted with slight modifications in Blum 1993) and Friedman (1993), pick up on this contrast between the impartiality of consequentialism and deontology and the inherent partiality of friendship, and argue more directly for a rejection of such moral theories. Consequentialists and deontologists must think that relationships like friendship essentially involve a kind of special concern for the friend and that such relationships therefore demand that one’s act

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