action which of all those available to him is reasonably judged the right
one (or a best one) in the light of the full system (including the priority
rules). Here I imagine that the priority rules are sufficient to resolve
conflicts of principles, or at least to guide the way to a correct assignment
of weights. Obviously, we are not yet in a position to state these rules for
more than a few cases; but since we manage to make these judgments,
useful rules exist (unless the intuitionist is correct and there are only
descriptions). In any case, the full system directs us to act in the light of
all the available relevant reasons (as defined by the principles of the
system) as far as we can or should ascertain them.
Now with these stipulations in mind, the phrases “other things equal”
and “all things considered” (and other related expressions) indicate the
extent to which a judgment is based upon the whole system of principles.
A principle taken alone does not express a universal statement which
always suffices to establish how we should act when the conditions of the
antecedent are fulfilled. Rather, first principles single out relevant features
of moral situations such that the exemplification of these features lends
support to, provides a reason for making, a certain ethical judgment. The
correct judgment depends upon all the relevant features as these are
identified and tallied up by the complete conception of right. We claim to
have surveyed each of these aspects of the case when we say that some-
thing is our duty all things considered; or else we imply that we know (or
have reason for believing) how this broader inquiry would turn out. By
contrast, in speaking of some requirement as a duty other things equal (a
so-called prima facie duty), we are indicating that we have so far only
taken certain principles into account, that we are making a judgment
based on only a subpart of the larger scheme of reasons. I shall not
usually signal the distinction between something’s being a person’s duty
(or obligation) other things equal, and its being his duty all things consid-
ered. Ordinarily the context can be relied upon to gather what is meant.
I believe that these remarks express the essentials of Ross’s concept of
prima facie duty. The important thing is that such riders as “other things
equal” and “all things considered” (and of course “prima facie”) are not
operators on single sentences, much less on predicates of actions. Rather
they express a relation between sentences, a relation between a judgment
and its grounds; or as I have put it above, they express a relation between
a judgment and a part or the whole of the system of principles that defines
its grounds.
6
This interpretation allows for the point of Ross’s notion. For
6. Here I follow Donald Davidson, “How Is Weakness of the Will Possible?” in
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