Fr. 124.00

The Scope of Moral Protest - Beyond Blame and Responsibility

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The book highlights a neglected aspect of our moral practices: we can morally protest objectionable conduct without blaming agents for it. In this way, moral responses to wrongful conduct are possible without assessing the blameworthiness of agents.
The book offers an account of moral protest as a type of stance-taking: in protest, the protester commits themselves to treating what they protest as morally objectionable, which is related to a specific class of moral emotions. The aptness conditions of moral protest and the concept of objectionability are discussed and this perspective is applied to a critical discussion of the attributionist view of blameworthiness and corresponding views of blame. It concludes that our moral practices allow for more variation than is often acknowledged, some of which unrelated to moral responsibility, and that this gives us reason not to insist on a broad view of blameworthiness. Specifically, it is argued that the significance of morally objectionable conduct and the needs of victims of wrongdoing can be done justice to without blame. The book thus suggests that moral protest without blame may be called for more often than we think, including for many types of wrongdoers whose culpability is disputed.

List of contents

Introduction.- Moral Responsibility and Blame.- The Protest View of Blame.- Moral Protest and its Attitudes.- Objectionability.- The Larger Picture and Its Implications.- Talbert's Victim Objection.- Conclusion. Responding to Immoral Conduct Beyond Responsibility and Blame.

About the author

Alexander Edlich was a research associate at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, where he completed his PhD in 2023. He works on topics related to moral responsibility, philosophy of emotions and feminist and LGBTQ ethics.

Summary

The book highlights a neglected aspect of our moral practices: we can morally protest objectionable conduct without blaming agents for it. In this way, moral responses to wrongful conduct are possible without assessing the blameworthiness of agents.
The book offers an account of moral protest as a type of stance-taking: in protest, the protester commits themselves to treating what they protest as morally objectionable, which is related to a specific class of moral emotions. The aptness conditions of moral protest and the concept of objectionability are discussed and this perspective is applied to a critical discussion of the attributionist view of blameworthiness and corresponding views of blame. It concludes that our moral practices allow for more variation than is often acknowledged, some of which unrelated to moral responsibility, and that this gives us reason not to insist on a broad view of blameworthiness. Specifically, it is argued that the significance of morally objectionable conduct and the needs of victims of wrongdoing can be done justice to without blame. The book thus suggests that moral protest without blame may be called for more often than we think, including for many types of wrongdoers whose culpability is disputed.

Product details

Authors Alexander Edlich
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 22.02.2025
 
EAN 9783662707418
ISBN 978-3-662-70741-8
No. of pages 271
Dimensions 148 mm x 15 mm x 210 mm
Weight 371 g
Illustrations IX, 271 p. 9 illus. Textbook for German language market.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > General, dictionaries

Philosophie des Geistes, Protest, Moral Philosophy and Applied Ethics, Blame, Moral Psychology, blameworthiness, moral responsibility, attributionism, objectionability

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