In normative ethics, people resort to different systems like deontology, utilitarianism, rights, and virtues. — Peaceful Discord
I think so. Here's a sketchy attempt ... and even sketchier clarification. (Embedded links go down rabbit holes of assumptions, etc.)Is it possible for someone to form an ethical theory based on increasing moral agency? — Peaceful Discord
True. Caring for a "moral patient", however, presupposes moral agency, whereby the latter increases in capabilities (as per OP's query) by exercising - a positive feedback loop - those capabilities which prevent, mitigate or relieve "suffering a moral wrong". Insofar as every moral agent also, simultaneously and always, is a moral patient (i.e. vulnerable or harmed), suffering is a "moral wrong" iff conceived of as decrease in - dysfunctioning of - capabilities which constitute agency (moral or otherwise); thus, an ethics of "increasing moral agency" entails reflectively caring for moral patients (i.e. cultivating virtue via negative utilitarian / consequentialist preferences and actions).No ethical theory can care about the agent only and ignore the moral patient since a moral wrong is always identified through someone suffering a moral wrong (at least potentially). — Congau
In principle, sure, and absolutely. But where the rubber meets the road, the moral patient and his need must be carefully identified - maybe not usually too much of a problem - and "caring" well-defined. The obvious example of problems created absent this rigour is caring for drug addicts. That is, it cannot even be done without careful preparatory work, understanding, and some preliminary decisions made and stuck to.entails reflectively caring for moral patients — 180 Proof
It is performatively self-contradictory for an agent to (actively) neglect, or not to take care, to develop - increase - her agency (moral and otherwise), therefore she must take care of her moral agency via exercises of caring for (i.e. preventing mitigating relieving the harm of) moral patients, — 180 Proof
I also assume you mean good moral agents. A moral agent is any rational being, and I doubt anyone would argue that increasing the number of people is a serious moral goal. — Congau
[That] It is performatively self-contradictory for an agent to.... is, I think, grounded deontologically ... so Kant's still relevant to me, however indirectly, for the time being. — 180 Proof
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