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Verfasst von:McKenna, Michael [VerfasserIn]   i
Titel:Responsibility and desert
Verf.angabe:Michael McKenna
Verlagsort:New York, NY
Verlag:Oxford University Press
E-Jahr:2024
Jahr:[2024]
Umfang:1 online resource.
Gesamttitel/Reihe:Oxford scholarship online
Fussnoten:Includes bibliographical references and index. - Description based on online resource and publisher information; title from PDF title page (viewed on October 3, 2024)
ISBN:978-0-19-767999-9
Abstract:Michael McKenna defends a theory of moral responsibility that explains the relationship between a wrongdoer and those who blame or punish on analogy with a conversation between speakers of a shared language. In central cases, blame functions like a conversational reply to another whose act bears a meaning revealing the morally objectionable quality of her will. But such blaming responses can be harmful. McKenna defends the thesis that they can nevertheless be justified in terms of desert, and he resists several criticisms of desert-based justifications for blame and punishment.
 "Responsibility & Desert advances a conversational theory of moral responsibility that relies upon desert as the normative basis for blame and punishment. A conversational theory understands the relationship between a blameworthy wrongdoer and those who hold her to account by blaming to be similar to the relationship between competent speakers engaged in a conversational exchange. Blame can therefore be appraised for being meaningful as a reply to a culpable party's conduct. But meaningfulness alone is inadequate to justify blame and punishment. Might one appeal to fairness, reasonableness, or just utility? Perhaps. But desert is widely regarded as the proper basis for blame and punishment. Well, is it? Responsibility & Desert explores just what desert is within the domain of moral responsibility, when conceptualized within the framework of the conversational theory. It does not offer an unqualified defence, but it does offer a best case for treating desert as the proper basis for the communicative character of blame and punishment. To do so, familiar challenges to desert and retribution are taken up. Does deserved blame and punishment commit us to the noninstrumental goodness of harms to the blameworthy and criminally culpable? Is this mere vengeance? Does it also commit us to extremely harsh treatment in response to extremely egregious wrongdoing? Responsibility & Desert does not shy away from accepting hard truths about appeal to desert, but it does show that many of the most damning indictments of it are misguided"--
DOI:doi:10.1093/9780197679999.001.0001
URL:Resolving-System: https://doi.org/10.1093/9780197679999.001.0001
 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/9780197679999.001.0001
Datenträger:Online-Ressource
Sprache:eng
Bibliogr. Hinweis:Erscheint auch als : Druck-Ausgabe
Sach-SW:Society
 Ethics & moral philosophy
K10plus-PPN:1909913707
 
 
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