How (Not) To Wrong Others with Our Thoughts: A Liberal Challenge Against the Possibility of Doxastic Wronging

IF 0.5 3区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY Ergo-An Open Access Journal of Philosophy Pub Date : 2023-07-17 DOI:10.3998/ergo.3595
Christine Bratu
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Abstract

In recent years, a number of authors have claimed that we can wrong each other simply by having certain beliefs—in particular sexist, racist, ableist etc. beliefs—about each other. So far, those who argue for the possibility of so-called doxastic wronging have tried to defend this idea by focusing on issues of doxastic control and coordination. In this paper, I raise a distinctly moral challenge against the possibility of doxastic wronging. I show that the idea of doxastic wronging runs afoul of the liberal principle according to which all moral obligations have to be justifiable vis-à-vis those they presume to bind. In addition, I argue that there is a better way to account for the fundamental intuition driving the debate: instead of assuming the possibility of doxastic wronging and the morally grounded epistemic duty it implies, we should conceptualize what is morally problematic about bigoted beliefs in terms of the harm they constitute for their targets.
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如何(不)用我们的思想去冤枉他人:一种自由主义的挑战,反对错误的可能性
近年来,一些作者声称,我们可以简单地通过对彼此的某些信念——特别是性别歧视、种族主义、体能主义等信念——来误导对方。到目前为止,那些认为存在所谓的错案的可能性的人试图通过关注错案控制和协调问题来捍卫这一观点。在本文中,我提出了一个明显的道德挑战,反对错误的可能性。我指出,荒谬错误的观念与自由主义原则相冲突,根据自由主义原则,所有道德义务都必须对-à-vis他们假定约束的人是正当的。此外,我认为有一种更好的方式来解释驱动辩论的基本直觉:与其假设武断错误的可能性和它所隐含的基于道德的认识义务,我们应该从偏执信仰对其目标构成的伤害的角度,将其在道德上的问题概念化。
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