Despite its profound significance for notions of legal responsibility, the courts and legal system have tended to avoid direct engagement with the philosophical problem of free will. Focusing on mental illness and the criminal law, I advance here a naturalistic approach that builds on the work of P. F. Strawson, one I believe offers a pragmatic basis from which to address the contradictions and challenges present when folk wisdom, science, philosophy and the law intersect. In this way, I contend that moving dialectically between a reflexive engagement with extant practical attitudes to freedom and the empirical investigation of the participant/object divide affords the opportunity to develop more rational and humane legal and social respons...
This thesis seeks an answer to a question of whether social normative systems, particularly law and ...
Philosophical work on free will is inevitably framed by the problem of free will and determinism. Th...
Free will is regarded by some as the most and by others as the least relevant concept for criminal r...
Despite its profound significance for notions of legal responsibility, the courts and legal system h...
Philosophical and Psychological Issues of Free Will; Free Will and Responsibility My thesis is deali...
Philosophical work on free will, contemporary as well as historical, is inevitably framed by the pro...
This article demonstrates that there is no free will problem in forensic psychiatry by showing that ...
"Free will skepticism refers to a family of views that all take seriously the possibility that human...
Free will skepticism is radical in its core claim that free will is illusory. Criminal law, however,...
This chapter argues that the folk-psychological model of the person and responsibility is not challe...
Philosophical work on free will, contemporary as well as historical, is inevitably framed by the pro...
The concept of free will is a problematic basis for assessing legal accountability. First of all, fr...
Michael S. Moore defends the ideas of free will and responsibility, especially in relation to crimin...
The author mounts a case against the libertarian and hard determinist's thesis that free will is imp...
Abstract: Two intuitions lie at the heart of our conception of free will. One intuition locates free...
This thesis seeks an answer to a question of whether social normative systems, particularly law and ...
Philosophical work on free will is inevitably framed by the problem of free will and determinism. Th...
Free will is regarded by some as the most and by others as the least relevant concept for criminal r...
Despite its profound significance for notions of legal responsibility, the courts and legal system h...
Philosophical and Psychological Issues of Free Will; Free Will and Responsibility My thesis is deali...
Philosophical work on free will, contemporary as well as historical, is inevitably framed by the pro...
This article demonstrates that there is no free will problem in forensic psychiatry by showing that ...
"Free will skepticism refers to a family of views that all take seriously the possibility that human...
Free will skepticism is radical in its core claim that free will is illusory. Criminal law, however,...
This chapter argues that the folk-psychological model of the person and responsibility is not challe...
Philosophical work on free will, contemporary as well as historical, is inevitably framed by the pro...
The concept of free will is a problematic basis for assessing legal accountability. First of all, fr...
Michael S. Moore defends the ideas of free will and responsibility, especially in relation to crimin...
The author mounts a case against the libertarian and hard determinist's thesis that free will is imp...
Abstract: Two intuitions lie at the heart of our conception of free will. One intuition locates free...
This thesis seeks an answer to a question of whether social normative systems, particularly law and ...
Philosophical work on free will is inevitably framed by the problem of free will and determinism. Th...
Free will is regarded by some as the most and by others as the least relevant concept for criminal r...