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The analyses of the last chapter were incomplete. In that chapter, I analyzed two concepts central to ethical theory: a person’s being to blame for an act, and an act’s being wrong in the subjective sense. I put these analyses, though, in terms of another notion that I left unexplained-in terms of “accepting norms”. Not that I was entirely silent on the nature of norms; I did, after all, broach various claims. All norms, I suggested, are primarily norms of rationality: norms for what it “makes sense” to do, to believe, to feel, and the like. What it means to call something “rational” is to be understood in terms of what it is to think or believe it rational, and to think something rational is to accept norms that permit it. Missing, though, was any real attempt to explain what it means for a person to accept norms.
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