In Mind of a Moral Agent, Susanna Blumenthal elegantly limns the rise and partial fall of the common sense theory of moral responsibility in American law. As Blumenthal convincingly describes it, the problem for early American jurists was nothing less than to solve the paradox of determinism and free will. How can the law declare someone morally culpable unless we are free to choose our own ends? After the Revolution, according to Blumenthal\u27s account, American doctors and jurists turned to a sunny, Scottish Enlightenment theory of moral responsibility. In place of the tortured moral gymnastics of an older generation of Calvinist-influenced thinkers, men like Benjamin Rush and James Wilson adopted the Scots\u27 idea of an innate moral ...
This project outlines what free will and moral responsibility would require in the truest sense, and...
There is more responsibility on heaven and earth than dreamt of in most philosophy. This d...
What are the freedom-relevant conditions necessary for someone to be a morally responsible person? ...
In “Mind of a Moral Agent,” Susanna Blumenthal elegantly limns the rise and partial fall of the comm...
One overriding concern I have with Susanna Blumenthal\u27s insightful and stimulating article, The ...
Drawing on Jacques Maritain\u27s doctrine of Knowledge through Connaturality, and on other authors i...
Mental Capacity and Legal Responsibility in American History Early U.S. jurisprudence with respect t...
John Martin Fischer has stated that his initial motivation for his work The Metaphysics of Free Will...
In The Stubborn System of Moral Responsibility (2015), Bruce Waller sets out to explain why the beli...
Throughout much of the first half of the twentieth century, the free-will debate was largely concern...
This essay examines three of the intuitions underlying the contemporary debate concerning free will ...
The Moral Tradition of American Constitutionalism is one of those rare works that leads us to face, ...
In his 1979 article, Unspeakable Ethics, Unnatural Law, Arthur Leff argued that in the absence of a ...
Free will skepticism is radical in its core claim that free will is illusory. Criminal law, however,...
Olsen and Toddington argue that there is a logical connection between law and moral rationality - ag...
This project outlines what free will and moral responsibility would require in the truest sense, and...
There is more responsibility on heaven and earth than dreamt of in most philosophy. This d...
What are the freedom-relevant conditions necessary for someone to be a morally responsible person? ...
In “Mind of a Moral Agent,” Susanna Blumenthal elegantly limns the rise and partial fall of the comm...
One overriding concern I have with Susanna Blumenthal\u27s insightful and stimulating article, The ...
Drawing on Jacques Maritain\u27s doctrine of Knowledge through Connaturality, and on other authors i...
Mental Capacity and Legal Responsibility in American History Early U.S. jurisprudence with respect t...
John Martin Fischer has stated that his initial motivation for his work The Metaphysics of Free Will...
In The Stubborn System of Moral Responsibility (2015), Bruce Waller sets out to explain why the beli...
Throughout much of the first half of the twentieth century, the free-will debate was largely concern...
This essay examines three of the intuitions underlying the contemporary debate concerning free will ...
The Moral Tradition of American Constitutionalism is one of those rare works that leads us to face, ...
In his 1979 article, Unspeakable Ethics, Unnatural Law, Arthur Leff argued that in the absence of a ...
Free will skepticism is radical in its core claim that free will is illusory. Criminal law, however,...
Olsen and Toddington argue that there is a logical connection between law and moral rationality - ag...
This project outlines what free will and moral responsibility would require in the truest sense, and...
There is more responsibility on heaven and earth than dreamt of in most philosophy. This d...
What are the freedom-relevant conditions necessary for someone to be a morally responsible person? ...