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On Epistemic Consequentialism and the Virtue Conflation Problem
Author(s) -
Carter J. Adam,
Church Ian M.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
thought: a journal of philosophy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.429
H-Index - 8
ISSN - 2161-2234
DOI - 10.1002/tht3.218
Subject(s) - conflation , virtue , epistemic virtue , consequentialism , epistemology , virtue ethics , reductio ad absurdum , philosophy , episteme , sociology , metaphysics
Addressing the ‘virtue conflation’ problem requires the preservation of intuitive distinctions between virtue types, that is, between intellectual and moral virtues. According to one influential attempt to avoid this problem proposed by Julia Driver (2003), moral virtues produce benefits to others—in particular, they promote the well‐being of others—while the intellectual virtues, as such, produce epistemic good for the agent . We show that Driver's demarcation of intellectual virtue, by adverting to the self‐/other distinction, leads to a reductio, and ultimately, that the prospects for resolving the virtue conflation problem look dim within an epistemic consequentialist approach to the epistemic right and the epistemic good.

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