[SydPhil] Reminder: Nicole Vincent Cancelled @ Mon 6 Aug 13:00 - 14:30 (Current Projects)
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Sun Aug 5 13:00:13 AEST 2012
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Title: Nicole Vincent Cancelled
A diachronic account of moderateness in regards to reasons-responsiveness
Dr Nicole Vincent, Philosophy Departments at Macquarie University (AU) and
TU Delft (NL)
(ver. 20120120)
People are responsible for what they do only if at the time of acting they
have enough of the right kinds of mental capacities – e.g. cognitive and
volitional ones – or if they are responsible for not having enough of the
right kinds of mental capacities. John Fischer’s compatibilist theory of
responsibility re-deploys this plausible idea by giving those mental
capacities physical form — he says that we are responsible for those
actions which issue from our own moderately reasons-responsive mechanisms,
or when we are responsible for the fact that those mechanisms are not
moderately reasons-responsive.
In Fischer's framework, moderately reasons-responsive mechanisms are
physical embodiments of the mental capacities which are required for
responsible moral agency. However, the first part of this paper argues that
for the same reason why incompatibilists are unlikely to swoon over the
first way of stating this idea – namely, because the only sense in which a
deterministic universe can contain capacities is a sense that can not
warrant reactive attitudes like blame and practices like retributive
punishment – so too they are unlikely to set aside their incompatibilist
concerns in light of Fischer’s way of stating this idea. Specifically, I
argue that how a mechanism might behave in other possible worlds is hardly
a consideration that can carry the heavy burden of justifying blaming or
punishing someone for what they did in this actual world. In other words,
although Fischer's conceptual analysis of the notion of moderateness in
regards to reasons-responsiveness captures a plausible sense of the notion
of "capacity", this conceptual analysis can not do the justificatory work
of warranting reactive attitudes like blame and practices like retributive
punishment.
Being a compatibilist myself though, in the second part of this paper I
also offer what I hope is a remedy. While Fischer would have us test for
moderate reasons-responsiveness by checking how a given mechanism would
behave during that time slice across a range of other possible worlds, I
instead suggest that we should check how that mechanism will behave in this
actual world over a span of time. I believe that my approach is superior
because, unlike Fischer, I link my conceptual analysis of “capacity” to an
inherently normative inquiry that is capable of carrying the burden of
justifying blaming and punishing someone for what they did in the actual
world — namely, to an investigation of the diachronic fairness of burdening
and benefiting a person by exposing them to responsibility-holding
practices.
When: Mon 6 Aug 13:00 – 14:30 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney
Where: Philosophy Common Room, Main Quad, USYD
Calendar: Current Projects
Who:
* kristiemiller4 at gmail.com- creator
Event details:
https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=XzZzczRjZDFwNzRyNGNiOWg2NTI0YWI5azhoMmsyYmExNmtwajJiOW43MHA0NGQxbDZnczRjZGhpNjQgZmV2MWxkcjRsa2h2MDM2b2U0aW4yanR0ZGdAZw
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