
Something is subject to luck if it is beyond our control. In this book, Haji shows that luck detrimentally affects both moral obligation and moral responsibility. He argues that factors influencing the way we are, together with considerations that link motivation and ability to perform intentional actions, frequently preclude our being able to do otherwise. Since obligation requires that we can do otherwise, luck compromises the range of what is morally obligatory for us. This result, together with principles that conjoin responsibility and obligation, is then exploited to derive the further skeptical conclusion that behavior for which we are morally responsible is limited as well. Throughout these explorations, Haji makes extensive use of concrete cases to test the limits of how we should understand free will moral responsibility, blameworthiness, determinism, and luck itself.
This book investigates the extent to which luck undermines moral obligation and individual blameworthiness. Ishtiyaque Haji, a scholar of moral philosophy, utilizes a rigorous analytical framework to examine how factors beyond human control influence motivation and the capacity to perform intentional actions. By challenging the assumption that individuals can always do otherwise, the author argues that luck significantly restricts the scope of moral obligation and, by extension, the conditions required for moral responsibility.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a sophisticated contribution to contemporary debates on moral luck and agency. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for those with a background in analytic philosophy.
Page Count:
376
Publication Date:
2016-01-14
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190260777
ISBN-13:
9780190260774
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