Advances in experimental philosophy of free will and responsibility

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Bibliographic Information

Advances in experimental philosophy of free will and responsibility

edited by Thomas Nadelhoffer and Andrew Monroe

(Advances in experimental philosophy / edited by James R. Beebe)

Bloomsbury Academic, 2022

  • : HB

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Advances in Experimental Philosophy of Free Will and Responsibility brings together leading researchers from psychology and philosophy to present new findings and ideas about human agency and moral responsibility. Their contributions reflect the growth of research in these areas over the past decade and highlight both the ways that philosophy can be relevant to empirical research and how empirical work can be relevant to philosophical investigations. Mixing new empirical work with the meta-philosophical and philosophical upshot of the latest research being done, chapters cover motivated cognition and free will beliefs, folk intuitions about manipulation and agency, mental control in assessments of responsibility, the importance of skilled decision making to free will judgments and the relationship between free will and substance dualism. Blending cutting-edge research from philosophy with methods from psychology, this collection is a compelling example of the value of interdisciplinary approaches, contributing to our understanding of the complex networks of attitudes, beliefs, and judgments that inform how we think about agency and responsibility.

Table of Contents

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

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Details
  • NCID
    BD04102529
  • ISBN
    • 9781350188082
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    London
  • Pages/Volumes
    xii, 206 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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