In this paper I discuss a recent exchange of articles between Hugh McLachlan and John Coggon on the relationship between omissions, causation and moral responsibility. My aim is to contribute to their debate by isolating a presupposition I believe they both share, and by questioning that presupposition. The presupposition is that, at any given moment, there are countless things that I am omitting to do. This leads them both to give a distorted account of the relationship between causation and moral or (as the case may be) legal responsibility, and, in the case of Coggon, to claim that the law’s conception of causation is a fiction based on policy. Once it is seen that this presupposition is faulty, we can attain a more accurate view of the ...
In his book Causing Death and Saving Lives, Jonathan Glover undertakes to criticize the acts and omi...
Many philosophers have argued that alternative possibilities are required for an agent’s moral respo...
The omission effect, first described by Spranca and colleagues (Spranca, Minsk, & Baron, 1991), has ...
Some omissions seem to be causes. For example, suppose Barry promises to water Alice’s plant, doesn’...
Accounts of moral responsibility commonly focus on responsibility for actions and their consequences...
In the mess of confusions called Anglo-American criminal law, writers commonly refer to the problem...
Most observers agree that it is morally worse to cause harm by engaging in an act than to contribute...
This book empirically investigates the social practice of ascribing moral responsibility to others f...
Analyses of factual causation face perennial problems, including preemption, overdetermination, and ...
In this paper, the ontological, terminological, epistemological, and ethical aspects of omission are...
This article analyzes the difficulties involved in attributing cause in fact in omission cases, and ...
This dissertation centers on agency and moral responsibility concerning actions and omissions, devel...
This paper warns of two threats to moral responsibility that arise when accounting for omissions, gi...
How should we deal with apparent causation involving events that have not happened when omissions ar...
This article is part of a symposium on Michael Moore\u27s Causation and Responsibility. In Causation...
In his book Causing Death and Saving Lives, Jonathan Glover undertakes to criticize the acts and omi...
Many philosophers have argued that alternative possibilities are required for an agent’s moral respo...
The omission effect, first described by Spranca and colleagues (Spranca, Minsk, & Baron, 1991), has ...
Some omissions seem to be causes. For example, suppose Barry promises to water Alice’s plant, doesn’...
Accounts of moral responsibility commonly focus on responsibility for actions and their consequences...
In the mess of confusions called Anglo-American criminal law, writers commonly refer to the problem...
Most observers agree that it is morally worse to cause harm by engaging in an act than to contribute...
This book empirically investigates the social practice of ascribing moral responsibility to others f...
Analyses of factual causation face perennial problems, including preemption, overdetermination, and ...
In this paper, the ontological, terminological, epistemological, and ethical aspects of omission are...
This article analyzes the difficulties involved in attributing cause in fact in omission cases, and ...
This dissertation centers on agency and moral responsibility concerning actions and omissions, devel...
This paper warns of two threats to moral responsibility that arise when accounting for omissions, gi...
How should we deal with apparent causation involving events that have not happened when omissions ar...
This article is part of a symposium on Michael Moore\u27s Causation and Responsibility. In Causation...
In his book Causing Death and Saving Lives, Jonathan Glover undertakes to criticize the acts and omi...
Many philosophers have argued that alternative possibilities are required for an agent’s moral respo...
The omission effect, first described by Spranca and colleagues (Spranca, Minsk, & Baron, 1991), has ...