Skepticism and moral responsibility
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21146/2072-0726-2023-16-1-160-176Keywords:
moral responsibility, skepticism, blameAbstract
Skepticism about moral responsibility is one of the most elaborated approaches to this important moral phenomenon in contemporary philosophical literature. In this paper, I use the skeptical approach in general, and specific skeptical arguments in particular, to clarify the connections between the conditions of an appropriate attribution of moral responsibility and the structural elements of this attitude. A distinction is made between moral dogmatism and a critical approach to morality, and a classification is given of the possible outcomes of the latter: skepticism proper, illusionism, and revolutionary approach. The difference between general moral skepticism and skepticism about moral responsibility is defined, and a classification of the types of skepticism about moral responsibility is proposed on the basis of which the elements of the structure of attribution of responsibility are questioned. Galen Strawson’s Basic argument, Gideon Rosen’s argument from epistemological regress, and his alethic conception of moral responsibility are analyzed. It is shown that Strawson’s argument unreasonably reduces moral responsibility to a so-called true moral responsibility. It is argued that the epistemic condition of responsibility to which the argument from regress is directed can be reduced to a normative condition, and thus regress can be avoided. The connection between responsibility and retribution, which Rosen postulates, is problematized. It is argued that the control condition binds the moral agent and the agent’s moral factor; the normative condition binds the agent’s moral factor and its moral value. It is argued that the connection between a moral factor and moral value cannot be the object of skepticism about moral responsibility.