It’s usually a province of consequentialism to separate rightness/wrongness from praiseworthiness/blameworthiness. They come together in other accounts. Appropriating deontic rules for only the latter purpose isn’t using deontic morality proper, it’s using a deontic-esque structure for blame and praise alone.
This point seems very important to me. I wonder how much disagreement is due to this, which I see as conflation.
How should I act? and How should I assign blame/praise? are very different questions. For one thing, when asking how to assign blame/praise, the framework for deciding blame/praiseworthiness is obviously key. However, when asking how oneself should act, the agent will have any number of considerations, and how praise or blame will be assigned by others may be a small or non-existent factor, depending on the situation.
In general, it seems like praisers and blamers will tend to be in a position of advocating for society, and actors will tend to be in a position of advocating for their individual interests.
Is there some motivation for wanting to unify these differing angles under one framework?
Perhaps germane to the distinction, at least for me, is that I find myself more interested in how to avoid blame and seek praise, so conflating them lets me figure out how to do that and also how to do what I should do simultaneously.
How one should assign blame/praise and how those things will in fact be assigned, however, are almost completely unrelated. One could be both blamed and unblameworthy, or praised and unpraiseworthy.
It’s usually a province of consequentialism to separate rightness/wrongness from praiseworthiness/blameworthiness. They come together in other accounts. Appropriating deontic rules for only the latter purpose isn’t using deontic morality proper, it’s using a deontic-esque structure for blame and praise alone.
This point seems very important to me. I wonder how much disagreement is due to this, which I see as conflation.
How should I act? and How should I assign blame/praise? are very different questions. For one thing, when asking how to assign blame/praise, the framework for deciding blame/praiseworthiness is obviously key. However, when asking how oneself should act, the agent will have any number of considerations, and how praise or blame will be assigned by others may be a small or non-existent factor, depending on the situation.
In general, it seems like praisers and blamers will tend to be in a position of advocating for society, and actors will tend to be in a position of advocating for their individual interests.
Is there some motivation for wanting to unify these differing angles under one framework?
Perhaps germane to the distinction, at least for me, is that I find myself more interested in how to avoid blame and seek praise, so conflating them lets me figure out how to do that and also how to do what I should do simultaneously.
How one should assign blame/praise and how those things will in fact be assigned, however, are almost completely unrelated. One could be both blamed and unblameworthy, or praised and unpraiseworthy.