Recently posted to SSRN (and published in Decomposing the Will, eds. Andy Clark, Julian Kiverstein, & Tillmann Vierkand)
"Situationism and Moral Responsibility: Free Will in Fragments"
MANUEL VARGAS, University of San Francisco
Many prominent accounts of free will and moral responsibility make use of the idea that agents can be responsive to reasons. Call such theories "Reasons" accounts. This chapter considers the tenability of Reasons accounts in light of situationist social psychology and, to a lesser extent, the automaticity literature. The first half of the chapter argues that Reasons accounts are genuinely threatened by results in contemporary psychology. The second half argues that these threats can largely be met, but that doing so requires abandoning a suite of familiar assumptions and expectations about responsible agency and Reasons accounts in particular. The chapter goes on to advance a new account of responsible agency that accommodates a variety of worries about situationism and automaticity.
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