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Acting and Refraining

Analysis 27 (4):133 - 139 (1967)

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  1. Omissions and other negative actions.Douglas N. Walton - 1980 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 1 (3):305-324.
    This essay offers an action-theoretic analysis of the distinction between positively bringing something about and passively letting something happen. The analysis, based on the notion of an agent''s bringing about some state of affairs, is closest to the analysis of omissions of Brand (1971), but utilizes the relatedness logic of Epstein (1979). Syntactic features bring out the idea that an action can be partially positive and partially negative, e.g., by not bringing about one thing an agent can bring about something (...)
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  • Omissions and other negative actions.Douglas N. Walton - 1980 - Metamedicine 1 (3):305-324.
  • Misfortune and Injustice: On Being Disadvantaged.Francis Snare - 1986 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 16 (1):39-61.
    We can enjoy and suffer many kinds of human goods and evils. The goods include not only experiences and enjoyments but also the having and exercise of various talents and abilities, the receipt of recognitions and rewards, successes, employments, opportunities. The evils include not only pains and frustrations but also defects such as ugliness, disabilities such as paralysis or retardation, lack of standard opportunities such as unemployment, financial loss, failure, disgrace. It is tempting to say that wherever a person has (...)
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  • Are 'killing' and 'letting die' adequately specified moral categories?Michael Philips - 1985 - Philosophical Studies 47 (1):151 - 158.
  • The Moral Equivalence of Action and Omission.Judith Lichtenberg - 1982 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 12 (sup1):19-36.
  • Some Aspects to the Doctrine of Double Effect.R. G. Frey - 1975 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 5 (2):259 - 283.
    My interest is in two of the four conditions which must be satisfied if the doctrine of double effect is to be successfully employed. One of these involves the distinction between direct and oblique intention, And I deny that this distinction is the index of character or goodness adherents to the doctrine take it to be. Rather, I emphasize the notion of "control responsibility", In considering several cases around which discussion of the doctrine has focused. I develop this notion, In (...)
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  • Letting and making death happen: Is there really no difference? The problem of moral linkage. [REVIEW]T. F. Dagi - 1990 - Journal of Medical Humanities 11 (2):81-90.
  • Withdrawal of life-support: Four problems in medical ethics. [REVIEW]Howard J. Curzer - 1994 - Journal of Medical Humanities 15 (4):233-241.
  • Who is starving whom?L. Jonathan Cohen - 1981 - Theoria 47 (2):65-81.
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  • Moral sequencing and intervening to prevent harm.Benjamin David Costello - 2019 - Dissertation, University of Birmingham
    This thesis will utilise the literature on the distinction between doing harm and allowing harm to develop a novel system of moral sequencing that can be applied to general moral problems to decide if, when, and how an agent should intervene to prevent harm from occurring to another agent. Off the back of this discussion, this thesis will offer a way of determining the responsibility of certain agents for their actions within a moral sequence. These motivations will be at the (...)
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