
Recent Philosophical Work Reveals Considerable Disagreement About What It Is To Be Morally Responsible For Something. Indeed, Some Theorists Claim To Distinguish Several Varieties Of Moral Responsibility, With Different Conditions That Must Be Satisfied If One Is To Bear Responsibility Of One Or Another Of These Kinds. This Volume Presents Twelve Original Essays From Participants In These Debates. The Contributors Include Prominent Established Figures As Well As Influential Younger Philosophers.
This volume investigates the conceptual foundations and conflicting definitions of moral responsibility within contemporary philosophical discourse. The editors, Angela M. Smith, Michael McKenna, and Randolph K. Clarke, curate a collection of twelve original essays that address the conditions required for an individual to be held morally accountable. By assembling perspectives from both established scholars and emerging voices, the text maps the current landscape of debate regarding the varieties of responsibility.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a significant contribution to the ongoing analytic debate regarding agency and accountability. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, making it a text primarily suited for advanced students and professional philosophers.
Page Count:
306
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
ISBN-10:
0190238933
ISBN-13:
9780190238933
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