This essay explores a conception of responsibility at work in moral and criminal responsibility. Our conception draws on work in the compatibilist tradition that focuses on the choices of agents who are reasons-responsive and work in criminal jurisprudence that understands responsibility in terms of the choices of agents who have capacities for practical reason and whose situation affords them the fair opportunity to avoid wrongdoing. Our conception brings together the dimensions of normative competence and situational control, and we factor normative competence into cognitive and volitional capacities, which we treat as equally important to normative competence and responsibility. Normative competence and situational control can and sho...
The study concerns a problem of lawyers’ moral responsibility which belongs to the philosophical are...
This article focuses on compatibilist approaches to moral responsibility—that is, approaches that se...
This essay articulates a conception of responsibility and excuse in terms of the fair opportunity to...
This essay explores a conception of responsibility at work in moral and criminal responsibility. Ou...
The present article makes the connection between the philosophic-legal issue of imposing criminal li...
This chapter focuses on the relationship between liability in (criminal) law, responsibility, and re...
We evaluate people and groups as responsible or not, depending on how seriously they take their resp...
In this paper I build upon the capacitarian account of moral responsibility, whose main tenet is tha...
The dissertation is an investigation of the American folk concept of moral fault-responsibility, foc...
“Except for limited forms of omissions liability, Anglo-American criminal law generally requires a c...
A widespread view in moral, legal, and political philosophy, as well as in public discourse, is that...
To answer whether moral responsibility is compatible with determinism, two different methods for jus...
What are our duties or rights? How should we act? What are we responsible for? How do we determine t...
We do not want arbitrariness in our moral judgments. In the first half of my thesis, I will discuss...
The fundamental nature of responsibility itself—that thing our blaming and punishing practices purpo...
The study concerns a problem of lawyers’ moral responsibility which belongs to the philosophical are...
This article focuses on compatibilist approaches to moral responsibility—that is, approaches that se...
This essay articulates a conception of responsibility and excuse in terms of the fair opportunity to...
This essay explores a conception of responsibility at work in moral and criminal responsibility. Ou...
The present article makes the connection between the philosophic-legal issue of imposing criminal li...
This chapter focuses on the relationship between liability in (criminal) law, responsibility, and re...
We evaluate people and groups as responsible or not, depending on how seriously they take their resp...
In this paper I build upon the capacitarian account of moral responsibility, whose main tenet is tha...
The dissertation is an investigation of the American folk concept of moral fault-responsibility, foc...
“Except for limited forms of omissions liability, Anglo-American criminal law generally requires a c...
A widespread view in moral, legal, and political philosophy, as well as in public discourse, is that...
To answer whether moral responsibility is compatible with determinism, two different methods for jus...
What are our duties or rights? How should we act? What are we responsible for? How do we determine t...
We do not want arbitrariness in our moral judgments. In the first half of my thesis, I will discuss...
The fundamental nature of responsibility itself—that thing our blaming and punishing practices purpo...
The study concerns a problem of lawyers’ moral responsibility which belongs to the philosophical are...
This article focuses on compatibilist approaches to moral responsibility—that is, approaches that se...
This essay articulates a conception of responsibility and excuse in terms of the fair opportunity to...