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Title Responsibility : the epistemic condition / edited by Philip Robichaud and Jan Willem Wieland
Edition First edition
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2017

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Description 1 online resource
Contents 1. Unwitting Wrongdoing, Reasonable Expectations, and Blameworthiness / William J. FitPatrick -- 2. Akrasia, Awareness, and Blameworthiness / Matthew Talbert -- 3. When Ignorance is No Excuse / Clayton Littlejohn -- 4. Vice, Blameworthiness, and Cultural Ignorance / Alan T. Wilson -- 5. Blame and Moral Ignorance / George Sher -- 6. When is Failure to Realize Something Exculpatory? / Elizabeth Harman -- 7. On Knowing What's Right and Being Responsible for It / Paulina Sliwa -- 8. Explaining (Away) the Epistemic Condition on Moral Responsibility / Gunnar Bjornsson -- 9. The Epistemic Condition on Moral Blameworthiness: A Theoretical Epiphenomenon / Peter A. Graham -- 10. Hard to Know / Gwen Bradford -- 11. Intellectual Difficulty and Moral Responsibility / Alexander A. Guerrero -- 12. Moral Responsibility and Quality of Will / Michael J. Zimmerman -- 13. Ignorance, Revision, and Commonsense / Randolph Clarke -- 14. Methodological Conservatism and the Epistemic Condition / Neil Levy -- 15. Tracing the Epistemic Condition / Matt King -- 16. Blame Transfer / Philip Robichaud
Summary Philosophers have long agreed that moral responsibility might not only have a freedom condition, but also an epistemic condition. Moral responsibility and knowledge interact, but the question is exactly how. Ignorance might constitute an excuse, but the question is exactly when. Surprisingly enough, the epistemic condition has only recently attracted the attention of scholars. This volume sets the agenda. Sixteen new essays address the following central questions: Does the epistemic condition require akrasia? Why does blameless ignorance excuse? Does moral ignorance sustained by one's culture excuse? Does the epistemic condition involve knowledge of the wrongness or wrongmaking features of one's action? Is the epistemic condition an independent condition, or is it derivative from one's quality of will or intentions? Is the epistemic condition sensitive to degrees of difficulty? Are there different kinds of moral responsibility and thus multiple epistemic conditions? Is the epistemic condition revisionary? What is the basic structure of the epistemic condition?
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Responsibility.
Virtue epistemology.
PHILOSOPHY -- Ethics & Moral Philosophy.
PHILOSOPHY -- Social.
Responsibility
Virtue epistemology
Form Electronic book
Author Robichaud, Philip, editor
Wieland, Jan Willem, editor.
ISBN 9780191824715
0191824712
9780191085222
0191085227