Luminosity Failure, Normative Guidance and the Principle ‘Ought-Implies-Can’
Nick Hughes
Utilitas, 2018, vol. 30, issue 4, 439-457
Abstract:
It is widely thought that moral obligations are necessarily guidance giving. This supposed fact has been put to service in defence of the ‘ought-implies-can’ principle according to which one cannot be morally obligated to do the impossible, since impossible-to-satisfy obligations would not give guidance. It is argued here that the supposed fact is no such thing; moral obligations are not necessarily guiding giving, and so the ‘guidance argument’ for ought-implies-can fails.
Date: 2018
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