
Published online:
22 March 2012
Published in print:
11 February 1993
Online ISBN:
9780191681844
Print ISBN:
9780198258315
Contents
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5.1 A Distinction With a Difference 5.1 A Distinction With a Difference
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5.2 The Structure of Extensional Divergence 5.2 The Structure of Extensional Divergence
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5.3 Raz and Exclusionary Reasons 5.3 Raz and Exclusionary Reasons
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5.4 Two Types of Justification 5.4 Two Types of Justification
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5.5 The Suboptimality of Rules 5.5 The Suboptimality of Rules
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5.6 Ruleness and Behavior 5.6 Ruleness and Behavior
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5.7 Rules of Thumb Revisited 5.7 Rules of Thumb Revisited
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Chapter
5 Decision-making by Entrenched Generalization
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Pages
77–111
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Published:February 1993
Cite
SCHAUER, FREDERICK, 'Decision-making by Entrenched Generalization', Playing by the Rules: A Philosophical Examination of Rule-Based Decision-Making in Law and in Life, Clarendon Law Series (Oxford , 1993; online edn, Oxford Academic, 22 Mar. 2012), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198258315.003.0005, accessed 29 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examine the distinction between particularistic and rule-based decision making. It analyses the suboptimality of rules and suggests that this account rejects the arguments about the extensional equivalence between particularistic and rule-based decision making procedures. It compares this account of rules with several others, including the rule-sensitive particularism found in the act-consequentialist literature and the analysis offered by Joseph Raz.
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