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DUTY

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'Duty' (from "due," that which is owing, O. Fr. deu, did, past participle of devoir; Lat. debere, debitum; cf. "debt") is a term that conveys a sense of moral commitment to someone or something. The moral commitment is the sort that results in action, and it is not a matter of passive feeling or mere recognition. When someone recognizes a duty, they commit themselves to the cause involved without considering the self-interested courses of actions that may have been relevant previously. This is not to suggest that living a life of duty precludes one from the best sort of life, but duty does involve some sacrifice of immediate self-interest. Pat Tillman is a recent example of someone who sacrificed immediate self-interest for what he recognized to be a duty to himself and his country. Tillman's case is also interesting because the duty Tillman recognized is not one that people assume all NFL players would have to recognize. The case suggests that you can self-select the duties that apply to you.
Cicero is an early philosopher who acknowledged this possibility. He discusses duty in his work “On Duty." He suggests that duties can come from four different sources. You can have them as a result of being human; you can have them as a result of your particular place in life (your family, your country, your job); the requirements of your personality can give you duties; and your own moral expectations for yourself can generate duties.
The Tillman case suggests that one has to accept a duty in order for it to apply to one's self, and this would cover cases where special duties apply to a person whose volunteers for a job with particular responsibilities. But it seems that one can be compelled to live up to a duty. In the case of mandatory child support, a parent is being put in such a position.
From the root idea of obligation to serve or give something in return, involved in the conception of duty, have sprung various derivative uses of the word; thus it is used of the services performed by a minister of a church, by a soldier, or by any employee or servant.
A special application is to a tax, a payment due to the revenue of a state, by force of law. Properly a "duty" differs from a "tax" in being levied on specific commodities, transactions, estates, &c., and not on individuals; thus it is right to talk of import-duties, excise-duties, death or succession-duties and etc., but of income tax as being levied on a person in proportion to his income.
Many schools of thought have debated the idea of duty. While many assert mankind's duty on their own terms, some philosophers have absolutely rejected a sense of duty (such as the great Taoists).

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See also



Kant

Negligence

Contract

Duty of care

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