
This book is about permissive consent--the moral tool we use to give another person permission to do what would otherwise be forbidden. For instance, consent to enter my home gives you permission to do what would otherwise be trespass. This transformation is the very thing that philosophers identify as consent--which is why we call it a normative power. It is something individuals can do, by choice, to change the moral or legal world. But what human acts or attitudes render consent? When do coercive threats, offers, or lies undermine the transformative power of consent? What intentions or conventions are necessary to render consent meaningful? This book develops a novel theory that explains the moral features of consent in some of the most central domains of human life--but that also serves as a study in how to theorize normative power. It argues that consent is a moral mechanism with exactly the set of features that, when triggered, prevents another person's behavior from constituting a certain kind of wrongdoing. What kind of wrongdoing? It depends on what sort of permission is being granted. Sometimes consent permits others to enter, occupy, or act within some bounded domain wherein the consent-giver holds moral authority. In these cases, consent operates to prevent what the book calls: Invasive Wrongdoing. By identifying the moral features that underlie this special wrongdoing, we can learn what it takes to render consent.
This book investigates the moral mechanics of permissive consent and the conditions under which it functions as a normative power to transform forbidden acts into permissible ones. Hallie Liberto, a philosopher specializing in moral and political theory, constructs a rigorous framework to analyze how individual choices alter the moral landscape. By examining the intersection of human attitudes, intentions, and conventions, the author argues that consent serves as a specific mechanism designed to prevent what she defines as Invasive Wrongdoing within bounded domains of authority.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in moral philosophy identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of normative powers and the metaphysics of consent. Readers frequently note the analytical density of the prose, which is intended for those familiar with contemporary ethical discourse.
Page Count:
283
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192661620
ISBN-13:
9780192661623
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