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'''Supererogation''' ([[Latin|Late Latin]]: ''supererogatio'' "payment beyond what is needed or asked", from ''super'' "beyond" and ''erogare'' "to pay out, expend", itself from ''ex'' "out" and ''rogare'' "to ask") is the performance of more than is asked for; the action of doing more than [[duty]] requires.<ref name=EB1911>{{Cite EB1911 |wstitle=Supererogation |volume=26 |page=111}}</ref> In [[ethics]], an act is '''supererogatory''' if it is good but not morally required to be done. It refers to an act that is more than is necessary, when another course of action—involving less—would still be an acceptable action. It differs from a duty, which is an act wrong not to do, and from acts morally neutral. Supererogation may be considered as performing above and beyond a normative course of duty to further benefits and functionality.
Some philosophers have proposed a corresponding concept of '''suberogation''' – whereas supererogatory acts are praiseworthy but not morally required, '''suberogatory''' acts are morally discouraged but not prohibited.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Driver|first=Julia|date=1992-09-01|title=The suberogatory|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/00048409212345181|journal=Australasian Journal of Philosophy|volume=70|issue=3|pages=286–295|doi=10.1080/00048409212345181|issn=0004-8402}}</ref> However, the concept is controversial; with some dispute as to whether suberogatory acts genuinely exist.<ref>{{Citation|last=Heyd|first=David|title=Supererogation|date=2019|url=https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2019/entries/supererogation/|encyclopedia=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy|editor-last=Zalta|editor-first=Edward N.|edition=Winter 2019|publisher=Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University|access-date=2021-07-07}}</ref>
==In theology==
===Catholicism===
In the [[theology]] of the [[Roman Catholic Church]], "works of supererogation" (also called "acts of supererogation") are those performed beyond what God requires.<ref name=EB1911/> The Roman Catholic Church holds that the [[counsels of perfection]] are supererogatory acts, which specific [[Christians]] may engage in above their moral duties. Similarly, it teaches that to determine how to act, one must engage in reasonable efforts to be sure of what the right actions are; after the reasonable action, the person is in a state of [[vincible ignorance|invincible ignorance]] and guiltless of wrongdoing, but to undertake more than reasonable actions to overcome ignorance is supererogatory, and praiseworthy.▼
▲The Roman Catholic Church holds that the [[counsels of perfection]] are supererogatory acts, which specific [[Christians]] may engage in above their moral duties. Similarly, it teaches that to determine how to act, one must engage in reasonable efforts to be sure of what the right actions are; after the reasonable action, the person is in a state of [[vincible ignorance|invincible ignorance]] and guiltless of wrongdoing, but to undertake more than reasonable actions to overcome ignorance is supererogatory, and praiseworthy.
According to the classic teaching on [[indulgence]]s, the works of supererogation performed by all the saints form a treasure with God, the "[[treasury of merit]]," which the church can apply to exempt [[repentance (Christianity)|repentant]] sinners from the works of [[penance|penitence]] that would otherwise be required of them to achieve full remission of the temporal punishment due to their sin.
===Protestantism===
[[Martin Luther]]'s opposition of this teaching seeded the [[Protestant Reformation]].{{Citation needed|date=July 2022}} The [[Church of England]] denied the doctrine of supererogation in the fourteenth of the [[Thirty-Nine Articles]], which states that works of supererogation (and the idea of a "
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returning lost property; sharing a load; damage compensation; limits of competition in business.
Its best known philosophic formulation is by both [[Rashi]] and [[Nachmanides]] in their respective [[Torah commentaries]].
Although celibacy is generally defined as a sin in Judaism, with no stated exceptions within Reform Judaism, Reform Judaism teaches that the [[cultural mandate]] is no longer necessary, so procreation between Jews within this sect of Judaism may be viewed as supererogatory acts.
==In law and moral philosophy==
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Some schools of [[moral philosophy]] do not include supererogatory acts.<ref>Urmson, J. O. (1958) “Saints and Heroes,” in A. I. Melden (ed.) Essays in Moral Philosophy. Seattle: University of Washington Press, pp. 198–216.</ref> In [[utilitarianism]], an act can only be better because it would bring more good to a greater number, and in that case it becomes a duty, not a supererogatory act. The lack of a notion of supererogation in utilitarianism and related schools leads to the [[demandingness objection]], arguing that these schools are too ethically demanding, requiring unreasonable acts.
==See also==
* [[Divine command theory]]
* [[Holy days of obligation]]
* [[Moral absolutism]]
* ''[[Mustahabb]]''
* [[Orthodoxy]]
* [[Perfectionism (disambiguation)|Perfectionism]]
* [[Phenomenology (philosophy)]]
* [[Religiosity]]
* [[Saint]]
* ''[[Via media]]''
==References==
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