
Consent can make actions morally permissible. But consent can be deprived of its moral force when it is given under duress. Understanding how this happens requires answering the question of which types of duress undermine consent. It is uncontroversial that severe coercion, like threats of violence, can prevent consent from creating moral permissions. But what about minor duress? Duress from natural causes? Duress from social norms? Duress that is merely apparent to the consent-giver with no objective basis in reality? To answer these questions, Consent under Duress defends an account that follows two key approaches. First, it adopts an expansive approach that broadens the class of misconduct that is constituted by acting on someone's consent that is given under duress. Second, it adopts a scalar approach that allows that consent can be invalidated to varying degrees, which in turn can track the degrees of the severity of the duress to which the consent-giver is subject. The expansive and scalar approaches work in tandem. Once there is an expansion of the aforementioned class of misconduct, additional theoretical resources are needed to draw moral distinctions within this heterogeneous class. By providing these resources, the scalar approach supplements the expansive approach. Meanwhile, once it is recognized that consent can be partially invalidated by minor duress, it is necessary to expand the class of what constitutes misconduct that is constituted by acting on someone's consent that is given under duress. By developing independent arguments for these mutually reinforcing approaches, Consent Under Duress offers a robust defense of their combination.
This book investigates the moral conditions under which consent is invalidated by duress, specifically addressing how various forms of pressure affect the moral permissibility of actions. Tom Dougherty, a philosopher specializing in ethics, provides a rigorous framework to analyze the intersection of consent and coercion. He argues for an expansive and scalar approach to understanding how different levels of duress—ranging from severe threats to social norms—impact the validity of consent and the resulting moral obligations of those acting upon it.
What You Will Find
Experts in moral philosophy and legal theory recognize this work as a significant contribution to the ethics of consent. Readers frequently note the analytical density of the prose, which is intended for an academic audience interested in the nuances of moral responsibility and interpersonal conduct.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2025-03-03
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198922337
ISBN-13:
9780198922339
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