Advances in Experimental Philosophy of Free Will and Responsibility
Advances in Experimental Philosophy of Free Will and Responsibility
Nadelhoffer, Thomas; Monroe, Andrew
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
10/2023
224
Mole
Inglês
9781350188129
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction, Thomas Nadelhoffer (College of Charleston, USA) and Andrew Monroe (Appalachian State University, USA)
1. Free Will Belief, Intention Attribution and Judging Responsibility, Oliver Genschow (University of Cologne, Germany) and Marcel Brass (Ghent University, Belgium)
2. The Blame Efficiency Hypothesis: An Evolutionary Framework to Resolve Rationalist and Intuitionist Theories of Moral Condemnation, Cory Clark (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
3. Mental States and Control-Based Theories of Moral Responsibility, Corey Cusimano (Princeton University, USA) and Geoffrey P Goodwin (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
4. The Zygote Argument: An Empirical Investigation, Florian Cova (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
5. Moral Responsibility Without (Some Kinds of) Freedom, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Duke University, USA)
6. Folk Jurisprudence, Free Will, and Moral Responsibility, Thomas Nadelhoffer (College of Charleston, USA) and Andrew Monroe (Appalachian State University, USA)
7. Moral Responsibility, Manipulation, and Experimental Philosophy, Alfred R. Mele (Florida State University, USA)
8. Direct and Derivative Moral Responsibility: An Overlooked Distinction in Experimental Philosophy, Pascale Willemsen (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
9. Victim Omissions: How Doing Nothing Affects Judgments of Cause and Blame, Laura Nemi (Cornell University, USA) and Paul Henne (Lake Forest College, USA)
10. Free Will and Skilled Decision Theory, Adam Feltz, Gwen Hoang, Braden Tanner, Jenna Holt, and Asif Muhammad (University of Oklahoma, USA)
Index
1. Free Will Belief, Intention Attribution and Judging Responsibility, Oliver Genschow (University of Cologne, Germany) and Marcel Brass (Ghent University, Belgium)
2. The Blame Efficiency Hypothesis: An Evolutionary Framework to Resolve Rationalist and Intuitionist Theories of Moral Condemnation, Cory Clark (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
3. Mental States and Control-Based Theories of Moral Responsibility, Corey Cusimano (Princeton University, USA) and Geoffrey P Goodwin (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
4. The Zygote Argument: An Empirical Investigation, Florian Cova (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
5. Moral Responsibility Without (Some Kinds of) Freedom, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Duke University, USA)
6. Folk Jurisprudence, Free Will, and Moral Responsibility, Thomas Nadelhoffer (College of Charleston, USA) and Andrew Monroe (Appalachian State University, USA)
7. Moral Responsibility, Manipulation, and Experimental Philosophy, Alfred R. Mele (Florida State University, USA)
8. Direct and Derivative Moral Responsibility: An Overlooked Distinction in Experimental Philosophy, Pascale Willemsen (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
9. Victim Omissions: How Doing Nothing Affects Judgments of Cause and Blame, Laura Nemi (Cornell University, USA) and Paul Henne (Lake Forest College, USA)
10. Free Will and Skilled Decision Theory, Adam Feltz, Gwen Hoang, Braden Tanner, Jenna Holt, and Asif Muhammad (University of Oklahoma, USA)
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
agency; judgement; decision; moral; empirical; experimental; cognition; morality
Introduction, Thomas Nadelhoffer (College of Charleston, USA) and Andrew Monroe (Appalachian State University, USA)
1. Free Will Belief, Intention Attribution and Judging Responsibility, Oliver Genschow (University of Cologne, Germany) and Marcel Brass (Ghent University, Belgium)
2. The Blame Efficiency Hypothesis: An Evolutionary Framework to Resolve Rationalist and Intuitionist Theories of Moral Condemnation, Cory Clark (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
3. Mental States and Control-Based Theories of Moral Responsibility, Corey Cusimano (Princeton University, USA) and Geoffrey P Goodwin (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
4. The Zygote Argument: An Empirical Investigation, Florian Cova (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
5. Moral Responsibility Without (Some Kinds of) Freedom, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Duke University, USA)
6. Folk Jurisprudence, Free Will, and Moral Responsibility, Thomas Nadelhoffer (College of Charleston, USA) and Andrew Monroe (Appalachian State University, USA)
7. Moral Responsibility, Manipulation, and Experimental Philosophy, Alfred R. Mele (Florida State University, USA)
8. Direct and Derivative Moral Responsibility: An Overlooked Distinction in Experimental Philosophy, Pascale Willemsen (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
9. Victim Omissions: How Doing Nothing Affects Judgments of Cause and Blame, Laura Nemi (Cornell University, USA) and Paul Henne (Lake Forest College, USA)
10. Free Will and Skilled Decision Theory, Adam Feltz, Gwen Hoang, Braden Tanner, Jenna Holt, and Asif Muhammad (University of Oklahoma, USA)
Index
1. Free Will Belief, Intention Attribution and Judging Responsibility, Oliver Genschow (University of Cologne, Germany) and Marcel Brass (Ghent University, Belgium)
2. The Blame Efficiency Hypothesis: An Evolutionary Framework to Resolve Rationalist and Intuitionist Theories of Moral Condemnation, Cory Clark (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
3. Mental States and Control-Based Theories of Moral Responsibility, Corey Cusimano (Princeton University, USA) and Geoffrey P Goodwin (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
4. The Zygote Argument: An Empirical Investigation, Florian Cova (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
5. Moral Responsibility Without (Some Kinds of) Freedom, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Duke University, USA)
6. Folk Jurisprudence, Free Will, and Moral Responsibility, Thomas Nadelhoffer (College of Charleston, USA) and Andrew Monroe (Appalachian State University, USA)
7. Moral Responsibility, Manipulation, and Experimental Philosophy, Alfred R. Mele (Florida State University, USA)
8. Direct and Derivative Moral Responsibility: An Overlooked Distinction in Experimental Philosophy, Pascale Willemsen (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
9. Victim Omissions: How Doing Nothing Affects Judgments of Cause and Blame, Laura Nemi (Cornell University, USA) and Paul Henne (Lake Forest College, USA)
10. Free Will and Skilled Decision Theory, Adam Feltz, Gwen Hoang, Braden Tanner, Jenna Holt, and Asif Muhammad (University of Oklahoma, USA)
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.