Julian Nida-RŸmelin, MŸnchen: There
is no Moral Luck
Most present day
philosophers assume that chance or luck is morally relevant. That it makes a
moral difference whether an action of mine has, by chance, good or bad
consequences. I will defend the opposing view: There is no moral luck, luck is
morally irrelevant. The examples which are taken to show that there is moral
luck rest on conceptual confusions. The confusion between reasonable bad
sentiments and moral responsibility (sec II), the confusion between ex ante
rationality and ex post assessment (sec III), the confusion between epistemic
and normative assessment (sec IV), the confusion between ideological
interpretation and moral judgement (sec V). The canonical account according to
which action is intentional behaviour, that the agent controls and for that she
is responsible, can be defended (sec VI) if one discriminates moral from other
forms of responsibility (VII).
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