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Deontological ethics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Categorical imperative - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The categorical imperative is the central philosophical concept in the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, as well as modern deontological ethics. Introduced in Kant's Groundwork for the Metaphysics...
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Introduction to Philosophy (University of Essex) ... • There are a number of related principles in the Kantian system – understanding how these fit together can start to give us a foundation for understanding his thought. ... ; Filed under: Deontology, Ethics, Kant, Meta-ethics, Normative Ethics | 2 Comments...
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Subject: Deontology & Kant; Actions not affected by their consequences, quote post #1. Why does Kant think that the rightness or wrongness ...
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1. Deontology's Foil: Consequentialism ... An example of this is the positing of rights not being violated, or duties being kept, as part of the Good to be maximized — the so-called “utilitarianism of rights.” (Nozick 1974) This latter position does not erase the difference between consequentialism and deontology.
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Deontological Ethics: An overview ... An Ethic of Duty - Deontology and Kant ... Ethics Glossary (see entry for Deontology)
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WHAT IS KANTIAN DEONTOLOGY?: Before we study in depth what the Kantian deontology is all about, one must know in first place what deontology means. According to Nelson Potter in Applied Ethics Vol.3, there exist two types of moral theories: teleological and deontological moral theories.
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