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dc.contributor.authorVallentyne, Petereng
dc.date.issued2006eng
dc.descriptionhttp://klinechair.missouri.edu/on-line%20papers/hurley.doceng
dc.description.abstractIn Justice, Luck, and Knowledge, Susan Hurley defends a reason-responsive account of responsibility, argues that appeals to responsibility cannot provide a justification or non-trivial specification of brute luck egalitarian theories of justice, and sketches her own cognitive-bias-neutralizing theory of justice. Throughout, Hurley is concerned with normative (as opposed to causal) responsibility, where this is understood as that which licenses (moral or prudential) praise, blame, and other reactive attitudes and which implies at least partial (substantive) moral accountability in principle for choices and their results. I shall focus on her arguments about the role of responsibility in brute luck egalitarian theories of justice.eng
dc.identifier.citationPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research, 72 (2006): 433-438eng
dc.identifier.issn0031-8205eng
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10355/10159eng
dc.publisherWiley-Blackwelleng
dc.relation.ispartofPhilosophy publicationseng
dc.relation.ispartofcommunityUniversity of Missouri-Columbia. College of Arts and Sciences. Department of Philosophyeng
dc.subjectjusticeeng
dc.subjectsocial and political philosophyeng
dc.subject.lcshFortune -- Moral and ethical aspectseng
dc.subject.lcshResponsibility -- Moral and ethical aspectseng
dc.subject.lcshResponsibility -- Philosophyeng
dc.subject.lcshEquality -- Philosophyeng
dc.subject.lcshDecision making -- Moral and ethical aspectseng
dc.subject.lcshDistributive justice -- Philosophyeng
dc.titleHurley on Justice and Responsibilityeng
dc.typeArticleeng


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