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    Wiping a torturer's brow may be considerate, yet this con... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→Virtues do not function as invariant reasons for action

    Wiping a torturer's brow may be considerate, yet this consideration does not constitute a reason to perform the action

    Virtue Ethics
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    Virtue Ethics

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    Moral Responsibility2 linkedConsequentialism1 linked

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    A cruel response may be exactly what circumstances call forAn action can be considerate without necessarily being better for that reasonThe torturer's other activities prevent what would ordinarily give a reason from...Virtues do not function as invariant reasons for action

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    Of course, for the suggestion to work, it must be the case that the virtues function invariantly. Particularists are likely to say, for instance, that an action can be considerate without necessarily being the better for it. It may be considerate to wipe the torturer’s brow, but this fact hardly functions as a reason to wipe, or makes his sweat a reason for us to wipe it off. The torturer’s other activities prevent what would ordinarily give us a reason from doing so here. Similarly, it may be t

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