Omissions and their moral relevance

Assessing causal and moral responsibility for the things we fail to do

著者:
This book empirically investigates the social practice of ascribing moral responsibility to others for the things they failed to do, and it discusses the philosophical relevance of this practice. In our everyday life, we often blame others for things they failed to do. For instance, we might blame our neighbour for not watering our plants during our vacation. Interestingly, the attribution of blame is typically accompanied by the attribution of causal responsibility. We do not only blame our neighbour for not watering our plants, but we do so because we believe that not watering the plants caused them to dry up and die. In this book, I investigate how we make moral and causal judgments about omissions. I discuss different philosophical perspectives on this matter, and I outline to what extent the actual social practice is in line with philosophical theories.

Prices from (excl. shipping):

Price upon request
Preliminary Material
页码: 1–8
Introduction
页码: 9–26
Moral responsibility
页码: 27–43
The Trilemma
页码: 62–64
Study 1: Are omissions on par with actions?
页码: 65–98
Study 2: Omissions and expectations
页码: 99–122
Summary
页码: 147–152
General Discussion
页码: 153–168
Appendix
页码: 169
References
页码: 170–180
List of tables
页码: 181
List of figures
页码: 182–183
Pascale Willemsen is Assistant Professor in philosophy at Ruhr-University Bochum. Her research focuses on questions related to moral philosophy, moral and causal cognition, the folk concept of lying, and philosophy of mind and action.
  • 折叠
  • 展开

Manufacturer information:
Koninklijke Brill B.V. 
Plantijnstraat 2
2321 JC
Leiden / The Netherlands
productsafety@degruyterbrill.com