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  2. The principle of fair play may be defined as follows. Suppose there is a mutu ally beneficial and just scheme of social cooperation, and that the advantages it yields can only be obtained if everyone, or nearly everyone, cooperates.

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  3. Fair competition, respect, friendship, team spirit, equality, sport without doping, respect for written and unwritten rules such as integrity, solidarity, tolerance, care, excellence and joy, are the building blocks of fair play that can be experienced and learnt both on and off the field.

    • What are the basic principles of Fair Play?1
    • What are the basic principles of Fair Play?2
    • What are the basic principles of Fair Play?3
    • What are the basic principles of Fair Play?4
    • What are the basic principles of Fair Play?5
  4. If it is not true, then (1) requires a defense employing a more complex account of special rights and obligations than the one offered by consent theory. One popular way of defending (1) relies on what has been called “the principle of fair play” (or “the principle of fairness”).

    • A. John Simmons
    • 2000
  5. Fair Play. Integrity, fairness and respect are the principles of fair play. With them, the spirit of competition thrives, fuelled by honest rivalry, courteous relations and a graceful acceptance of results. Section. 4.

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  6. The principle of fair play defended in this paper centers on a requirement of rec-iprocity. On this interpretation, it is a “self-benefitprinciple (Arneson 1982). In a well-known work, Lawrence Becker (1990, 3) describes reciprocity as follows:

  7. My 1979 essay “The Principle of Fair Play” had two principal objectives. The first was to defend the principle of fair play (against critics like Nozick) as a valid principle of moral obligation, a principle not reducible to or deriveble from some more basic or fundamental principle of obligation.

  8. One popular way of defending (i) relies on what has been called "the principle of fair play" (or "the principle of fairness").1 Advocates of this principle argue that promises and deliberate consent are not. the only possible grounds of special rights and obligations; the ac-.

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