Content area

Abstract

Harry Frankfurt Journal of Philosophy, 66, 829–39 (1969) famously attacked what he called the principle of alternate possibilities (PAP). PAP states that being able to do otherwise is necessary for moral responsibility. He gave counterexamples to PAP known since then as “Frankfurt cases.” This paper sidesteps the enormous literature on Frankfurt cases while preserving some of our salient pretheoretical intuitions about the relation between alternate possibilities and moral responsibility. In particular, I introduce, explain, and defend a principle that has so far been overlooked, namely, “the principle of doxastic moral asymmetry” (PODMA): a rational agent, S, is morally responsible for an action that S performed, E, only if, when S did E, S justifiably believed either that E was closer to S’s most praiseworthy alternate possibility than it was to S’s most blameworthy alternate possibility, or that E was closer to S’s most blameworthy alternate possibility than it was to S’s most praiseworthy alternate possibility.

Details

Title
Alternate Possibilities and Moral Asymmetry
Author
Daniel Avi Coren 1 

 Philosophy Department, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA 
Pages
145-159
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Jun 2018
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
03535150
e-ISSN
18746349
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2036760037
Copyright
Acta Analytica is a copyright of Springer, (2017). All Rights Reserved.