Two Ways to Frustrate a Desire

In both Tea Plant and Tea Spray, Beata prevents Andrew’s desire to drink the cup of tea from being satisfied, and in both cases, this is plausibly pro tanto wrong—that is, Beata’s action in each case possesses some feature or features that render it wrong, absent defeaters.2 Nevertheless, we suspect...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Birks, D, Douglas, T
Format: Journal article
Published: Springer Verlag 2017
_version_ 1797054552411734016
author Birks, D
Douglas, T
author_facet Birks, D
Douglas, T
author_sort Birks, D
collection OXFORD
description In both Tea Plant and Tea Spray, Beata prevents Andrew’s desire to drink the cup of tea from being satisfied, and in both cases, this is plausibly pro tanto wrong—that is, Beata’s action in each case possesses some feature or features that render it wrong, absent defeaters.2 Nevertheless, we suspect that many would judge there to be a moral difference between these cases—they would judge that the intervention in Tea Spray is in some respect more pro tanto wrong than the intervention in Tea Plant. That is to say, there is some feature of Beata’s action in Tea Spray that renders it wrong, absent defeaters, and that is either not possessed by her action in Tea Plant, or would be more easily defeated in that case.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T18:58:49Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:12d10936-ef05-4726-b2aa-7c306f874e71
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T18:58:49Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Springer Verlag
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:12d10936-ef05-4726-b2aa-7c306f874e712022-03-26T10:10:07ZTwo Ways to Frustrate a DesireJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:12d10936-ef05-4726-b2aa-7c306f874e71Symplectic Elements at OxfordSpringer Verlag2017Birks, DDouglas, TIn both Tea Plant and Tea Spray, Beata prevents Andrew’s desire to drink the cup of tea from being satisfied, and in both cases, this is plausibly pro tanto wrong—that is, Beata’s action in each case possesses some feature or features that render it wrong, absent defeaters.2 Nevertheless, we suspect that many would judge there to be a moral difference between these cases—they would judge that the intervention in Tea Spray is in some respect more pro tanto wrong than the intervention in Tea Plant. That is to say, there is some feature of Beata’s action in Tea Spray that renders it wrong, absent defeaters, and that is either not possessed by her action in Tea Plant, or would be more easily defeated in that case.
spellingShingle Birks, D
Douglas, T
Two Ways to Frustrate a Desire
title Two Ways to Frustrate a Desire
title_full Two Ways to Frustrate a Desire
title_fullStr Two Ways to Frustrate a Desire
title_full_unstemmed Two Ways to Frustrate a Desire
title_short Two Ways to Frustrate a Desire
title_sort two ways to frustrate a desire
work_keys_str_mv AT birksd twowaystofrustrateadesire
AT douglast twowaystofrustrateadesire