BooksDirect

Description - Who Knew? by George Sher

To be responsible for their acts, agents must both perform those acts voluntarily and in some sense know what they are doing. Of these requirements, the voluntariness condition has been much discussed, but the epistemic condition has received far less attention. In Who Knew? George Sher seeks to rectify that imbalance. The book is divided in two halves, the first of which criticizes a popular but inadequate way of understanding the epistemic condition,
while the second seeks to develop a more adequate alternative. It is often assumed that agents are responsible only for what they are aware of doing or bringing about--that their responsibility extends only as far
as the searchlight of their consciousness. The book criticizes this "searchlight view" on two main grounds: first, that it is inconsistent with our attributions of responsibility to a broad range of agents who should but do not realize that they are acting wrongly or foolishly, and, second, that the view is not independently defensible. The book's positive view construes the crucial relation between an agent and his failure to recognize the wrongness or foolishness of what he is doing in causal
terms: the agent is responsible when, and because, his failure to respond to his reasons for believing that he is acting wrongly or foolishly has its origins in the same constitutive psychology that
generally does render him reason-responsive.

Buy Who Knew? by George Sher from Australia's Online Independent Bookstore, BooksDirect.

A Preview for this title is currently not available.
Ethics: Essential Readings in Moral Theory
Hardback , Feb '12
RRP: $389.00 $381.22
Beyond Neutrality
Hardback , Jan '97
RRP: $154.95 $139.45
A Wild West of the Mind
Hardback , Sep '21
RRP: $77.95 $70.15
Equality for Inegalitarians
Hardback , Jul '14
RRP: $145.95 $131.35
In Praise of Blame
Hardback , Dec '05
RRP: $103.95 $93.55
Me, You, Us
Hardback , Sep '17
RRP: $254.00 $228.60