
In this collection of essays -- a follow up to My Way and Our Stories -- John Martin Fischer defends the contention that moral responsibility is associated with "deep control." Fischer defines deep control as the middle ground between two untenable extreme positions: "superficial control" and "total control."Our freedom consists of the power to add to the given past, holding fixed the laws of nature, and therefore, Fischer contends, we must be able to interpret our actions as extensions of a line that represents the actual past. In "connecting the dots," we engage in a distinctive sort of self-expression. In the first group of essays in this volume, Fischer argues that we do not need genuine access to alterative possibilities in order to be morally responsible. Thus, the line need not branch off at crucial points (where the branches represent genuine metaphysical possibilities). In the remaining essays in the collection he demonstrates that deep control is the freedom condition on moral responsibility. In so arguing, Fischer contends that total control is too much to ask--it is a form of "metaphysical megalomania." So we do not need to "trace back" all the way to the beginning of the line (or even farther) in seeking the relevant kind of freedom or control. Additionally, he contends that various kinds of "superficial control"--such as versions of "conditional freedom" and "judgment-sensitivity" are too shallow; they don't trace back far enough along the line. In short, Fischer argues that, in seeking the freedom that grounds moral responsibility, we need to carve out a middle ground between superficiality and excessive penetration. Deep Control is the "middle way."Fischer presents a new argument that deep control is compatible not just with causal determinism, but also causal indeterminism. He thus tackles the luck problem and shows that the solution to this problem is parallel in important ways to the considerations in favor of the compatibility of causal determini
This collection investigates the nature of moral responsibility by proposing 'deep control' as the necessary middle ground between superficial and total control. John Martin Fischer, a prominent philosopher in the field of agency and ethics, utilizes a series of analytical essays to argue that moral responsibility does not require the ability to do otherwise or total metaphysical control over one's history. He constructs a framework where human freedom is understood as the capacity to interpret one's actions as a meaningful extension of the actual past.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a significant contribution to contemporary analytic philosophy regarding agency and moral responsibility. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which is intended for those with a background in metaphysical discourse.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2011-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190453915
ISBN-13:
9780190453916
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