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引用次数: 5
摘要
道德责任要求有所作为的观点面临着因果过度决定案例和因果优先案例(如法兰克福案例)的挑战。在某些情况下,代理人似乎对他们无法避免的事情负有责任。为了处理这些情况,我从一种貌似合理的道德运气方法中寻求帮助。继John Martin Fischer(1986)和Michael Zimmerman(2002)之后,我为自己的观点辩护,即一个人的责任程度不受道德运气的影响,但一个人负责的事件范围受道德运气的影响。然后,我认为这种观点导致了一种貌似合理的错误理论,可以解释我们关于因果过度决定和先发制人的责任直觉。这个错误理论使我们能够避免反例来反驳责任要求有所作为的说法。
Luckily, We Are Only Responsible for What We Could Have Avoided
The view that moral responsibility requires making a difference faces challenges from both cases of causal overdetermination and cases of causal preemption (such as Frankfurt-style Cases). In some such cases it seems that an agent is responsible for something that they could not have avoided. To deal with these cases, I enlist help from a plausible approach to moral luck. Following John Martin Fischer (1986) and Michael Zimmerman (2002), I defend the view that one’s degree of responsibility is immune to moral luck but the scope of events for which one is responsible is subject to moral luck. I then argue that this view leads to a plausible error theory for our responsibility intuitions concerning cases of causal overdetermination and preemption. This error theory allows us to avoid counterexamples to the claim that responsibility requires making a difference.
期刊介绍:
Midwest Studies in Philosophy presents important thinking on a single topic in philosophy with each volume. Influential contributors bring provocative and varying ideas to the theme at hand. Recent volumes of Midwest Studies in Philosophy include Truth and its Deformities, Philosophy and the Empirical, Shared Intentions and Collective Responsibility, and Free Will and Moral Responsibility.