Moral luck /

"Many of us are inclined to accept something like the following principle: We can only be properly morally assessed for what is in our control. And yet our ordinary practices seem to frequently violate this principle. The resulting tension, and the attempt to resolve it, is the problem of moral...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Khoury, Andrew C. (Editor), French, Peter A. (Editor), Wettstein, Howard K. (Editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Boston, MA : Wiley Periodicals Inc., [2019]
Series:Midwest studies in philosophy v. 43.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Thinking outside the (traditional) boxes of moral luck / Dana Kay Nelkin
  • The attributionist approach to moral luck / Matthew Talbert
  • Moral luck and control / Steven D. Hales
  • Putting the luck back into moral luck / Neil Levy
  • Free will and moral responsibility : manipulation, luck, and agents' histories / Alfred R. Mele
  • Flickers of freedom and moral luck / Carolina Sartorio
  • Luckily, we are only responsible for what we could have avoided / Philip Swenson
  • Practical decision and the cognitive requirements for blameworthiness / E.J. Coffman
  • Kant does not deny resultant moral luck / Robert J. Hartman
  • Moral luck and deviant causation / Sara Bernstein
  • Transformative moral luck / Marcela Herdova
  • Agent-regret and accidental agency / Rachana Kamtekar and Shaun Nichols
  • Debunking, vindication and moral luck / Daniel Statman
  • Free will, self-creation, and the paradox of moral luck / Kristin M. Mickelson
  • Playing the hand you're dealt : how moral luck is different from morally significant plain luck (and probably doesn't exist) / David Enoch.