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Moral Responsibility Reconsidered

โœ Scribed by Gregg D. Caruso; Derk Pereboom


Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Year
2022
Tongue
English
Leaves
86
Series
Elements in Ethics
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


This Element examines the concept of moral responsibility as it is used in contemporary philosophical debates and explores the justifiability of the moral practices associated with it, including moral praise/blame, retributive punishment, and the reactive attitudes of resentment and indignation. After identifying and discussing several different varieties of responsibility-including causal responsibility, take-charge responsibility, role responsibility, liability responsibility, and the kinds of responsibility associated with attributability, answerability, and accountability-it distinguishes between basic and non-basic desert conceptions of moral responsibility and considers a number of skeptical arguments against each. It then outlines an alternative forward-looking account of moral responsibility grounded in non-desert-invoking desiderata such as protection, reconciliation, and moral formation. It concludes by addressing concerns about the practical implications of skepticism about desert-based moral responsibility and explains how optimistic skeptics can preserve most of what we care about when it comes to our interpersonal relationships, morality, and meaning in life.

โœฆ Table of Contents


Cover
Title page
Copyright page
Moral Responsibility Reconsidered
Contents
1 Moral Responsibility
1.1 Varieties of Responsibility
1.2 Desert-Based Moral Responsibility
1.3 Against Consequentialist Accounts of Non-Basic Desert
2 Skepticism about Basic Desert
2.1 Free Will and Moral Responsibility
2.2 The Problem of Free Will: Positions and Background
2.3 The Manipulation Argument against Compatibilism
2.4 The Disappearing Agent Argument against Event-Causal Libertarianism
2.5 Is Agent-Causal Libertarianism Reconcilable with Science?
3 Forward-Looking Moral Responsibility
3.1 A Single-Tier Forward-Looking View
3.2 Blame and Anger
3.3 Blame as Forward-Looking Moral Protest
3.4 A Moral Protest Account of Self-Blame
4 Implications of Skepticism about Basic Desert
4.1 Illusionism vs Optimistic Skepticism
4.2 Morality
4.3 Personal Relationships
4.4 Meaning in Life
4.5 Basic Desert Skepticism and Criminal Behavior
5 Final Words
References


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