If I might offer an example that might illustrate some of these principles.duszek wrote: One could replace "aim" by "pleasure" in this context, because pleasure is something everybody aims at.
Deontology: The means justifies the pleasure.
Consequentialism: The pleasure justifies the means.
The other option is to replace "means" by pleasure:
Deontology: The pleasure justifies the aim.
Consequentialism: The aim justifies the pleasure.
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In playing the piano there are a few pieces that I can play competently and do so for my own pleasure. The require nothing more than my sitting down and playing them.
There are other pieces that I like and want to play but lack the ability to do so. They will require time and effort to practice and become proficient in their performance. The frustrating thing is that some of them are pieces that I had played well 40 years ago, but that time without a piano to play on regularly means that I have lost the ability to do so.
In these cases I can play a piece that I know for the immediate pleasure of doing so. But the pieces that I cannot now play will require some time and effort to become proficient and that pleasure will come later.
(I had played while I was in HS and for awhile after, but did not have a piano in the house since. 3 Years ago in November we volunteered to "store" a Sohmer Model 57 for our church and I decided I wanted a piano of my own when the Sohmer was taken away. So I found a Baldwin model R the next summer and for almost 2 years had 2 grand pianos, a 5' 7" and a 5' 8", in my living room.) I finally had the opportunity to relearn how to play.