Traditional learning maintains that liability for negligence is ultimately premised on notions of moral blameworthiness. It is thought that the legal principles which define the scope of negligence loosely conform to such notions. This article challenges that view. While there is a certain amount of evidence which supports the conventional view it is argued that this evidence is eclipsed by many important instances where the tort of negligence is insensitive to considerations of moral blameworthiness
This is no new subject, yet most of the very able treatment it has received has been written so as g...
Ordinary morality judges agents blameworthy for negligently produced harms. In this paper I offer tw...
Under the fault principle as we know it today there are many situation in which A is held liable to ...
This essay investigates moral and legal responsibility for negligence. Negligence has many meanings;...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
This article concerns the problem of factual uncertainty in negligence law. We argue that negligence...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
The general problem of moral luck—that responsibility is profoundly affected by factors beyond the c...
Even though it offers a compelling account of the responsibility-component in the negligence standar...
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
The paper has dual aim: to analyse the structure of negligence, and to use it to offer an explanatio...
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
Negligence is not a ground of liability unless it causes injury or damage to some interest which the...
This is no new subject, yet most of the very able treatment it has received has been written so as g...
Ordinary morality judges agents blameworthy for negligently produced harms. In this paper I offer tw...
Under the fault principle as we know it today there are many situation in which A is held liable to ...
This essay investigates moral and legal responsibility for negligence. Negligence has many meanings;...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
This article concerns the problem of factual uncertainty in negligence law. We argue that negligence...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
The general problem of moral luck—that responsibility is profoundly affected by factors beyond the c...
Even though it offers a compelling account of the responsibility-component in the negligence standar...
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
The paper has dual aim: to analyse the structure of negligence, and to use it to offer an explanatio...
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
Negligence is not a ground of liability unless it causes injury or damage to some interest which the...
This is no new subject, yet most of the very able treatment it has received has been written so as g...
Ordinary morality judges agents blameworthy for negligently produced harms. In this paper I offer tw...
Under the fault principle as we know it today there are many situation in which A is held liable to ...