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    Strategic collective action and the proportionality of reasons to expected benefits
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 1-32. 2024.
    We argue that, in order to explain the relative strengths of our reasons to contribute to different collective endeavours, approaches to the ethics of collective action must understand the strengths of our reasons to make a given contribution as proportional to its expected benefits, or its chances of bringing about benefits in proportion to their magnitudes. The view that most clearly meets this proportionality requirement is the expected consequences approach, which identifies our reasons to p…Read more