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Wiggins and Ross

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 January 2009

Jonathan Dancy
Affiliation:
University of Reading, j.p.dancy@reading.ac.uk

Abstract

Ross's attempt to undermine the consequentialist understanding of the relation between duties and outcomes might give him greater defence against the danger that outcome-related duties will come to constitute a norm, to the disadvantage of all others.

Type
10th Anniversary Symposium
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1998

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References

1 All otherwise unattributed page references are to this work.

2 See e.g. Hornsby, J., ‘On What's Intentionally Done’, in Action and Value in Criminal Law, ed. Shute, S. et al. , Oxford, 1993, p. 56Google Scholar.

3 This is my own definition of the extrinsic, not one that Ross would accept. He understands the intrinsic either as the non-instrumental or in terms of Moore's infamous isolation test.