Thursday, December 19, 2019
Analyzing Strawson s Three Arguments Against The...
The aim of this essay is to assess Strawsonââ¬â¢s three arguments against the incompatibilist from his paper, ââ¬ËFreedom and Resentmentââ¬â¢ (1974). To this aim, I will first give the context of Strawsonââ¬â¢s discussion. Next, I will give an account of causal determinism, following McKenna and Russell (2010), then explain the three camps that have emerged from the dialectic: the (i) compatibilist, (ii) incompatibilist and (iii) what I will call the ââ¬Ënon-Strawsonianââ¬â¢ pessimist. I will then explain how Strawsonââ¬â¢s reactive attitudes framework fits with his three arguments against the incompatibilist. I will then give an analysis of why these arguments fail to show that the incompatibilist position is false. Finally, I will conclude by maintaining that Strawsonââ¬â¢s reactive attitudes framework do not demonstrate that the incompatibilist is mistaken in holding that determinism would undermine moral responsibility. Before I begin, I will first note that Strawsonââ¬â¢s 1974 paper, ââ¬ËFreedom and Resentmentââ¬â¢ fits into a broader debate about moral responsibility and free will where he argues for a type of compatibilist position in the free will and moral responsibility literature. I will now define the relevant terms. Determinism is the claim that ââ¬Å"everything that happens in the world including all human thought and action-is subject to causal laws and that this involves the necessitation of effects by antecedent causal conditionsâ⬠(McKenna and Russell, 2012, 1). What this means is that the course of
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