Jiang argues that the Jephthah problem does not become morally acceptable simply by replacing the daughter with some lesser victim such as an aunt, neighbor, or stranger, because the act remains murder.
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Moral universality
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "so um so so let's let's do the hypothetical where okay the problem is that jetfa um had to kill the daughter okay let's..."
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A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "so um so so let's let's do the hypothetical where okay the problem is that jetfa um had to kill the daughter okay let's..."
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"so um so so let's let's do the hypothetical where okay the problem is that jetfa um had to kill the daughter okay let's..."
"seventh circle or lower i think so as well okay so so now it's not the end it's the neighbor"
"bad okay let's give you the daughter okay how about i don't know stranger yeah the stranger that's still murder that's still so no..."
"flesh and blood that's why it's so bad that's why he is like the key example that i understand but"
Relevant Lectures And Readings
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