Philosophy-Imputable Acts

Dr. Kitchel
Ethics 2314

  "Imputable Acts in Regards to the Fate of a World"

    
    An act is called imputable when the person committing the act is in possession of both knowledge and consent in regards to the action at hand.  Imputability is a thing that is always completely possessed or completely not possessed by a person. Imputability causes accountability.  Accountability has degrees upon which it is based and these degrees depend on whether or not the person was influenced by some modifier of either the intellect or the will.  Imputability's requirements, knowledge and consent, have to do with the relationship between the act in question and whether or not it is a good or evil act.  An act is either objectively, morally good or evil.  To the degree that the person committing the act is aware of this in the form of either knowledge or consent is the degree to which the act itself is imputable and thereby also the person is accountable for the act.  The characters in C. S. Lewis' novel, "Prelandra", make choices and perform acts that drastically effect the outcome of the world in which the novel takes place.  Some of these acts are wholly imputable while others are not.  However, all of the acts are either good or evil.  As a result of this, the novel illustrates the importance of being able to distinguish the difference between good and evil acts in the consequences that befall its characters from their own actions within the novel.
    The novel's protagonist, John Ransom of Thucalandra (Earth), is sent by Maleldil (God) to the planet of Prelandra (Venus) in order to stop the Bent Oyarsa (Satan) from corrupting that planet as he did with Earth ...
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