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جستجوی مقالات
چهارشنبه 26 آذر 1404
پژوهش های فلسفی – کلامی
، جلد ۲۳، شماره ۳، صفحات ۵۱-۷۲
عنوان فارسی
Divine and Conventional Frankfurt Examples
چکیده فارسی مقاله
The principle of alternate possibilities (
PAP
) says that you are morally praiseworthy or blameworthy for something you do only if you could have done otherwise. Frankfurt examples are putative counterexamples to
PAP.
These examples feature a failsafe mechanism that ensures that some agent cannot refrain from doing what she does without intervening in how she conducts herself, thereby supposedly sustaining the upshot that she is responsible for her behavior despite not being able to do otherwise. I introduce a Frankfurt example in which the agent who could not have done otherwise is God. Paying attention to the freedom requirements of moral obligation, the example is commissioned, first, to assess whether various states
of affairs that are unavoidable for God can be obligatory for God and for which
God can be praiseworthy. The example is, next, used to unearth problems with conventional Frankfurt examples that feature human agents. I argue that conceptual connections between responsibility and obligation cast suspicion on these examples. Pertinent lessons that the divine Frankfurt example helps to reveal motivate the view that divine foreknowledge and determinism, assuming that both preclude freedom to do otherwise, may well imperil obligation and responsibility.
کلیدواژههای فارسی مقاله
عنوان انگلیسی
Divine and Conventional Frankfurt Examples
چکیده انگلیسی مقاله
The principle of alternate possibilities (
PAP
) says that you are morally praiseworthy or blameworthy for something you do only if you could have done otherwise. Frankfurt examples are putative counterexamples to
PAP.
These examples feature a failsafe mechanism that ensures that some agent cannot refrain from doing what she does without intervening in how she conducts herself, thereby supposedly sustaining the upshot that she is responsible for her behavior despite not being able to do otherwise. I introduce a Frankfurt example in which the agent who could not have done otherwise is God. Paying attention to the freedom requirements of moral obligation, the example is commissioned, first, to assess whether various states
of affairs that are unavoidable for God can be obligatory for God and for which
God can be praiseworthy. The example is, next, used to unearth problems with conventional Frankfurt examples that feature human agents. I argue that conceptual connections between responsibility and obligation cast suspicion on these examples. Pertinent lessons that the divine Frankfurt example helps to reveal motivate the view that divine foreknowledge and determinism, assuming that both preclude freedom to do otherwise, may well imperil obligation and responsibility.
کلیدواژههای انگلیسی مقاله
blameworthiness, Determinism, divine Frankfurt example, foreknowledge, obligation, praiseworthiness
نویسندگان مقاله
Ishtiyaque Haji |
Professor of Philosophy, Department of Philosophy, University of Calgary, Canada.
نشانی اینترنتی
https://pfk.qom.ac.ir/article_2029_b7c9f97b9fdff37d2e6f557bf06a5bb0.pdf
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