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Erschienen in: The Journal of Value Inquiry 2/2016

12.09.2015

How to Reject Resultant Moral Luck Alone

verfasst von: Eduardo Rivera-López

Erschienen in: The Journal of Value Inquiry | Ausgabe 2/2016

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Excerpt

Thomas Nagel famously distinguishes four kinds of moral luck (in which factors beyond our control nevertheless have bearing on our moral responsibility).1 Three of these are antecedent to our actions: constitutive luck (our character traits), remote causal conditions (being born in a certain time and place, for example), and circumstantial luck (the circumstances in which we act). The remaining kind of moral luck, resultant luck, concerns the results of our actions: the fact that our negligent or intentional actions produce a particular outcome or not often depends on whether some uncontrollable facts occur. Many think that resultant moral luck does not exist, because we cannot be blamed more or less depending on facts that are entirely beyond our control. The problem with this argument is that the other three kinds of moral luck (though I will focus specifically on circumstantial luck) have exactly the same feature: our responsibility also depends on whether certain (antecedent) uncontrollable facts hold. However, rejecting all kinds of moral luck is, as we will see, a bold and implausible move. My goal is to take some initial steps in defense of the motto: circumstantial (and all other kinds of antecedent) moral luck, Yes; resultant moral luck, No. My argument does not amount to proof that resultant moral luck does not exist. I merely try to show that rejecting resultant luck while accepting circumstantial luck is not necessarily inconsistent or unmotivated. …

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Fußnoten
1
See Thomas Nagel, “Moral Luck,” in D. Statman (ed.), Moral Luck (Albany: State University of New York, 1993), pp. 57–71.
 
2
See ibid., p. 61.
 
3
C1 is actually compounded by a huge number of facts, but I stress Robert’s being on a certain street at a certain moment because these are the relevant facts for my discussion.
 
4
See for example Steven Sverdlik, “Crime and Moral Luck,” in Statman, op. cit., 181–194; Marcelo Ferrante, “Recasting the Problem of Resultant Luck,” Legal Theory, Vol. 15 (2009): 267–300; Michael Zimmerman, “Taking Luck Seriously,” The Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 99, No 11 (2002): 553–576. The labels “Kantian” and “anti-Kantian” are stipulative. They are not meant to indicate that Kant defended exactly this view.
 
5
See Bernard Williams, “Moral Luck,” in Statman, op. cit, 35–55. Anti-Kantians might explain the different degree of responsibility by appealing to the fact that Anne and Bertha are responsible for different things: Anne is responsible for attempting to kill, whereas Bertha is responsible for killing (or for Robert’s death). I will come back to this point later on, but the crucial disagreement between Kantians and anti-Kantians is, in my view, that, according to the anti-Kantian, in examples of this kind Bertha deserves stronger blame than Anne, whereas for Kantians they deserve equal blame.
 
6
“Prima facie,” because there may be cases in which, for same specific reason, the agent should not be blamed. For example, if blaming that person carries extremely bad consequences.
 
7
For simplicity, I will focus on actions. Most of what I say should also be valid for omissions, although there are some asymmetries that might make a difference (see Carolina Sartorio, “Resultant Luck,” Philosophy & Phenomenological Research, Vol. 84, No 1 (2011): 1–24, pp. 8–15).
 
8
I am assuming that the counterfactual is true (Carla would kill Robert if…). A libertarian (an incompatibilist defender of free will) might deny that this kind of statement is true or false. Nevertheless, even the libertarian should agree that Carla has been morally lucky not to be confronted to the situation in which she should have made the (free) decision of killing Robert (or not).
 
9
This problem is approached in different ways in Ferrante, op. cit., p. 268; Zimmerman, op. cit.; Michael Moore, Placing Blame (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), pp. 233–243; Brynmor Browne, “A Solution to the Problem of Moral Luck”, The Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 42, No 168 (1992): 345–356, p. 347; Brian Rosebury, “Moral Responsibility and ‘Moral Luck’”, The Philosophical Review, Vol. 104, No 4 (1995): 499–524, p. 507.
 
10
Zimmerman, op. cit, p. 564.
 
11
See Zimmerman, op. cit., p. 575. A more radical Kantian position might reject that essential character traits are a matter of luck. One might interpret Kant as holding that those traits are based on pure, spontaneous reason. I cannot discuss this point here (although I thank a reviewer for calling my attention to it). However, we should admit that the idea of a rational will, completely detached from any kind of determination, has always been very difficult to sustain, even for Kantians.
 
12
In fact, Zimmerman seems inclined to such a revisionist view. See his argument against retributive punishment in Michael Zimmerman, The Immorality of Punishment (Buffalo, N.Y.: Broadview Press, 2011), pp. 121–150.
 
13
A further consequence is that the anti-Kantian also accepts that Bertha is, ceteris paribus, more responsible than Carla, although neither has killed Robert (or anyone).
 
14
By saying that the attempt is, under the circumstances, sufficient for responsibility, I mean that a set of additional conditions holds, such as that there is no justification or excuse (insanity, coercion, etc.). The assumption is not problematic because it remains constant in all my examples.
 
15
I thank an anonymous reviewer for raising this point.
 
Metadaten
Titel
How to Reject Resultant Moral Luck Alone
verfasst von
Eduardo Rivera-López
Publikationsdatum
12.09.2015
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
The Journal of Value Inquiry / Ausgabe 2/2016
Print ISSN: 0022-5363
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-0492
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10790-015-9531-8

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