… consequentialism judges the act of visiting a friend in hospital to be (almost certainly) good since the outcome is (almost certainly) better than not doing it. That’s it. No other considerations need apply. [...] whether there exist other possible acts that were also good are irrelevant.
I don’t know of any consequentialist theory that looks like that. What is the general consequentialist principle you are deploying here? Your reasoning seems very one off. Which is fine! That’s exactly what I’m advocating for! But I think we’re talking past each other then. I’m criticizing Consequentialismnot just any old moral reasoning that happens to reference the consequences of one’s actions (see my response to npostavs)
I don’t know of any consequentialist theory that looks like that. What is the general consequentialist principle you are deploying here? Your reasoning seems very one off. Which is fine! That’s exactly what I’m advocating for! But I think we’re talking past each other then. I’m criticizing Consequentialism not just any old moral reasoning that happens to reference the consequences of one’s actions (see my response to npostavs)