
Is It Ever Possible For People To Act Freely And Intentionally Against Their Better Judgement? Is It Ever Possible To Act In Opposition To One's Strongest Desire? If Either Of These Questions Are Answered In The Negative, The Common-sense Distinctions Between Recklessness, Weakness Of Will And Compulsion Collapse. This Would Threaten Our Ordinary Notion Of Self-control And Undermine Our Practice Of Holding Each Other Responsible For Moral Failure. So A Clear And Plausible Account Of How Weakness Of Will And Self-control Are Possible Is Of Great Practical Significance. Taking The Problem Of Weakness Of Will As Her Starting Point, Jeanette Kennett Builds An Admirably Comprehensive And Integrated Account Of Moral Agency Which Gives A Central Place To The Capacity For Self-control. Her Account Of The Exercise And Limits Of Self-control Vindicates The Common-sense Distinction Between Weakness Of Will And Compulsion And So Underwrites Our Ordinary Allocations Of Moral Responsibility. She Addresses With Clarity And Insight A Range Of Important Topics In Moral Psychology, Such As The Nature Of Valuing And Desiring, Conceptions Of Virtue, Moral Conflict, And The Varieties Of Recklessness (here Characterised As Culpable Bad Judgement) - And Does So In Terms Which Make Their Relations To Each Other And To The Challenges Of Real Life Obvious. Agency And Responsibility Concludes By Testing The Accounts Developed Of Self-control, Moral Failure, And Moral Responsibility Against The Hard Cases Provided By Acts Of Extreme Evil.
This book investigates the conditions under which individuals can be held morally responsible for their actions, specifically addressing the mechanisms of self-control and weakness of will. Jeanette Kennett, a philosopher specializing in moral psychology, utilizes a framework that integrates theories of desire, valuing, and practical reasoning. She argues that a robust account of self-control is necessary to maintain the distinction between voluntary moral failure and genuine compulsion, thereby justifying our social practices of accountability.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in the field of ethics and moral psychology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the understanding of agency and the limits of self-control. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is balanced by the author's clear application of theory to practical moral dilemmas.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2001-01-01
Publisher:
Clarendon Press
ISBN-10:
0191658774
ISBN-13:
9780191658778
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