This essay investigates moral and legal responsibility for negligence. Negligence has many meanings; the essay considers the creation of an unjustified and low probability risk of causing harm. The common-sense moral precept that one should not be negligent reflects neither a coldly calculating economic or utilitarian conception, nor an absolutist deontological conception that ignores all costs or disadvantages of taking precautions against risk. Rather, ordinary moral judgments, informed by plausible nonutilitarian and deontological moral principles, can make sense of the duty not to act negligently. And a pluralistic balancing approach can recognize the breadth of values expressed in these judgments and principles. In law, norms of neglig...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
The paper has dual aim: to analyse the structure of negligence, and to use it to offer an explanatio...
Traditional learning maintains that liability for negligence is ultimately premised on notions of mo...
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
This collection of essays represents a ground-breaking collaboration between moral philosophers, act...
It is commonly accepted that one can be morally responsible for negligent behavior and its consequen...
Inadvertent actions in relation to legal and moral responsibility have been represented as puzzling ...
Rediscovering the Law of Negligence offers a systematic and theoretical exploration of the law of ne...
Tort law assesses negligence according to the conduct of a reasonable person of ordinary prudence wh...
Tort law assesses negligence according to the conduct of a reasonable person of ordinary prudence wh...
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 ...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...
Despite the outpouring of interest in tort and criminal theory over the last thirty years, not much ...
The paper has dual aim: to analyse the structure of negligence, and to use it to offer an explanatio...
Traditional learning maintains that liability for negligence is ultimately premised on notions of mo...
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
This is a draft of my chapter on Negligence for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook in Moral Psychology....
This collection of essays represents a ground-breaking collaboration between moral philosophers, act...
It is commonly accepted that one can be morally responsible for negligent behavior and its consequen...
Inadvertent actions in relation to legal and moral responsibility have been represented as puzzling ...
Rediscovering the Law of Negligence offers a systematic and theoretical exploration of the law of ne...
Tort law assesses negligence according to the conduct of a reasonable person of ordinary prudence wh...
Tort law assesses negligence according to the conduct of a reasonable person of ordinary prudence wh...
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 ...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...