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  2. Feb 10, 2006 · Coercion is typically thought to carry with it several important implications, including that it diminishes the targeted agent’s freedom and responsibility, and that it is a (pro tanto) wrong and/or violation of right.

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  3. Dec 22, 2011 · If I am right, the wrongness of coercion is not to be explained by reference to our most lofty or sacred moral values, such as freedom and autonomy, but rather by reference to the wrongness of motivating oneself to do wrong.

    • Benjamin Alan Sachs
    • 2013
  4. Aug 24, 2019 · Coercion can affect positive freedom only in the sense that our will cannot supply the appropriate motive for an action we did not choose. However, coercion – indeed, any external influence – cannot touch the choice-making capacity that determines the motives of our actions.

    • Benjamin L. McKean
    • 2019
  5. Jan 22, 2021 · Domestically, coercion theory does not seem able to ground domestic distributive equality in the way it aims to do. Globally, the implications of coercion theory are much more complex, ramified, and ultimately demanding than the ‘global sufficiency, domestic equality’ story suggests.

    • Miriam Ronzoni
    • 2021
  6. May 16, 2021 · The clarifications and distinctions proposed throughout the paper are valuable in their own right: They can be accepted and be useful even to those who are inclined to reject my arguments in favour of prioritising the strict reading of “coercive.”

    • Lucas Miotto
    • 2021
  7. Feb 10, 2006 · Coercion is typically thought to carry with it several important implications, including that it diminishes the targeted agent's freedom and responsibility, and that it is a (pro tanto) wrong and/or violation of right.

  8. For Lasswell and Kaplan, 'Coercion is a high degree of constraint and/or inducement'. Christian Bay takes coercion to. involve 'the application of sanctions sufficiently strong to make the individual abandon a course of action or inaction dictated by his own strong and enduring motives or desires'. Finally, Robert.

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