Difference between revisions of "MRFW SEP Lecture Notes"
From Alfino
Jump to navigationJump to searchm |
m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==MRFW SEP Lecture Notes== | ==MRFW SEP Lecture Notes== | ||
− | + | ==SEP article, Skepticism about Moral Responsibility== | |
− | ==Introductory== | + | ===Introductory=== |
:*MR skepticism: "refers to a family of views that all take seriously the possibility that human beings are never morally responsible for their actions in a particular but pervasive sense." range of skepticism. | :*MR skepticism: "refers to a family of views that all take seriously the possibility that human beings are never morally responsible for their actions in a particular but pervasive sense." range of skepticism. | ||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
::*take charge responsibility or "Taking responsibility" | ::*take charge responsibility or "Taking responsibility" | ||
− | ==Arguments for MR Skepticism== | + | ===Arguments for MR Skepticism=== |
− | ===1. Arguments connected to traditional FW positions=== | + | ====1. Arguments connected to traditional FW positions==== |
:*Connection to Free Will discussion - For some, MR & FW are definitionally tied. So: No FW, no MR. (For others, there is no relationship!). | :*Connection to Free Will discussion - For some, MR & FW are definitionally tied. So: No FW, no MR. (For others, there is no relationship!). | ||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
::*Hard Incompats work the analogy bt. determinism and "manipulation". Pereboom's famous "four case" argument p. 11. | ::*Hard Incompats work the analogy bt. determinism and "manipulation". Pereboom's famous "four case" argument p. 11. | ||
− | ===2. Less directly FW focused arguments for MR Skepticism - "Ultimate Impossibility" arguments=== | + | ====2. Less directly FW focused arguments for MR Skepticism - "Ultimate Impossibility" arguments==== |
:*Strawson's "causa sui" argument (fr. Nietzsche). Also the "Basic Arguement" (p. 15) | :*Strawson's "causa sui" argument (fr. Nietzsche). Also the "Basic Arguement" (p. 15) | ||
− | ===3. Luck === | + | ====3. Luck ==== |
:*p. 18-25 | :*p. 18-25 | ||
− | ===4. Scientific Challenges=== | + | ====4. Scientific Challenges==== |
:*Threats from neuroscience: Libet | :*Threats from neuroscience: Libet | ||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
:*Threats from naturalist (and evolutionary) accounts of social behavior | :*Threats from naturalist (and evolutionary) accounts of social behavior | ||
− | ===Implications of MR Skepticism=== | + | ====Implications of MR Skepticism==== |
:*What would happen if we become MR skeptics? | :*What would happen if we become MR skeptics? | ||
Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
:*Empirical studies on effects of FW / anti-FW priming (31) | :*Empirical studies on effects of FW / anti-FW priming (31) | ||
− | ===Reactive Attitudes Arguments=== | + | ====Reactive Attitudes Arguments==== |
:*Arguments about the social value or importance of various sets of attitudes we might cultivate or discultivate. | :*Arguments about the social value or importance of various sets of attitudes we might cultivate or discultivate. | ||
Line 58: | Line 58: | ||
:*Strawson again arguing for that we need a package of reactive attitudes to navigate social life. | :*Strawson again arguing for that we need a package of reactive attitudes to navigate social life. | ||
− | ===Arguments about effects of MR Skepticism on Morality=== | + | ====Arguments about effects of MR Skepticism on Morality==== |
:*PVI: "I have listened to philosophers who deny the existence of moral responsibility. I cannot take them seriously. I know a philosopher who has written a paper in which he denies the reality of moral responsibility. And yet this same philosopher, when certain of his books were stolen, said, “That was a shoddy thing to do!” But no one can consistently say that a certain act was a shoddy thing to do and say that its agent was not morally responsible when he | :*PVI: "I have listened to philosophers who deny the existence of moral responsibility. I cannot take them seriously. I know a philosopher who has written a paper in which he denies the reality of moral responsibility. And yet this same philosopher, when certain of his books were stolen, said, “That was a shoddy thing to do!” But no one can consistently say that a certain act was a shoddy thing to do and say that its agent was not morally responsible when he | ||
Line 68: | Line 68: | ||
:*Maybe not, but "Blame implies can" evidence from emp. philosophy. | :*Maybe not, but "Blame implies can" evidence from emp. philosophy. | ||
− | ===Criminal Punishment=== | + | ====Criminal Punishment==== |
:*Retributivism in Am CJ system. | :*Retributivism in Am CJ system. |
Revision as of 17:29, 25 January 2021
Contents
- 1 MRFW SEP Lecture Notes
- 2 SEP article, Skepticism about Moral Responsibility
- 2.1 Introductory
- 2.2 Arguments for MR Skepticism
- 2.2.1 1. Arguments connected to traditional FW positions
- 2.2.2 2. Less directly FW focused arguments for MR Skepticism - "Ultimate Impossibility" arguments
- 2.2.3 3. Luck
- 2.2.4 4. Scientific Challenges
- 2.2.5 Implications of MR Skepticism
- 2.2.6 Reactive Attitudes Arguments
- 2.2.7 Arguments about effects of MR Skepticism on Morality
- 2.2.8 Criminal Punishment
- 3 SEP article, Moral Luck
- 4 SEP article, Moral Responsibility
MRFW SEP Lecture Notes
SEP article, Skepticism about Moral Responsibility
Introductory
- MR skepticism: "refers to a family of views that all take seriously the possibility that human beings are never morally responsible for their actions in a particular but pervasive sense." range of skepticism.
- Critics argue that morality may hang in the balance if we abandon tradition conceptions of blame and retribution. But "Optimistic skeptics" think we would be better off morally and maybe practically.
- Desert based judgements: "resentment, indignation, moral anger, backward-looking blame, and retributive punishment"
- Consequentialist vs. Desert-based -- forward looking vs. backward looking.
- Types of responsibility not affected by MR skepticism: (p. 5)
- Attributability -- we can still attribute actions to individuals based on consistency with their identity.
- Answerability - "According to this conception of responsibility,
someone is responsible for an action or attitude just in case it is connected to her capacity for evaluative judgment in a way that opens her up, in principle, to demands for justification from others"
- take charge responsibility or "Taking responsibility"
Arguments for MR Skepticism
1. Arguments connected to traditional FW positions
- Connection to Free Will discussion - For some, MR & FW are definitionally tied. So: No FW, no MR. (For others, there is no relationship!).
- Traditional hard det. approach: Determinism implies "you could not have done otherwise" (Dennett will challenge this.)
- Hard Incompatibalism -- whether reality is det. or indet. we lack basic desert MR. Also denies Libertarian indet. provides basis for desert MR. (more at p. 10)
- Hard Incompats work the analogy bt. determinism and "manipulation". Pereboom's famous "four case" argument p. 11.
2. Less directly FW focused arguments for MR Skepticism - "Ultimate Impossibility" arguments
- Strawson's "causa sui" argument (fr. Nietzsche). Also the "Basic Arguement" (p. 15)
3. Luck
- p. 18-25
4. Scientific Challenges
- Threats from neuroscience: Libet
- Threats from psychology: automaticity, situationism, adaptive unconscious,
- Threats from naturalist (and evolutionary) accounts of social behavior
Implications of MR Skepticism
- What would happen if we become MR skeptics?
- Trad. arg undermining morality
- MR skeptic view "illusionism" 33 - we ought to promote the illusion of FW.
- MR skeptic view "disillusionism" 34 - better off disillusioned from error.
- MR skeptic view "optimistic skepticism"
- Empirical studies on effects of FW / anti-FW priming (31)
Reactive Attitudes Arguments
- Arguments about the social value or importance of various sets of attitudes we might cultivate or discultivate.
- Strawson again arguing for that we need a package of reactive attitudes to navigate social life.
Arguments about effects of MR Skepticism on Morality
- PVI: "I have listened to philosophers who deny the existence of moral responsibility. I cannot take them seriously. I know a philosopher who has written a paper in which he denies the reality of moral responsibility. And yet this same philosopher, when certain of his books were stolen, said, “That was a shoddy thing to do!” But no one can consistently say that a certain act was a shoddy thing to do and say that its agent was not morally responsible when he
performed it. (1983: 207)
- Other authors: C.A. Campbell, W.T. Stace Susan Wolf,
- "Ought implies can" arguments
- Maybe not, but "Blame implies can" evidence from emp. philosophy.
Criminal Punishment
- Retributivism in Am CJ system.
- Deterrence theories (util) -- "use objection" - worries about unjust use of util. punishment
- Moral Education theories -- punishment must benefit person punished.