
Responsibility: The Epistemic Condition
by Robichaud, Philip; Wieland, Jan Willem-
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Author Biography
Philip Robichaud, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam,Jan Willem Wieland, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Philip Robichaud received his PhD from Rice University in 2012 for a dissertation on the epistemic condition. From 2013-2016 he was a postdoc on the 'Enhancing Responsibility' project at Delft University of Technology, before taking up a tenure track position at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. His current research project entitled 'Nudging Responsibly: The impact of choice architecture on responsibility attributions' is funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research.
Jan Willem Wieland is a postdoc in the philosophy department at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. His interests lie between ethics and epistemology, and his current research centers on the epistemic condition. Previously, he wrote a dissertation on infinite regress arguments in philosophy, and he has long-term ambitions to promote analytical skills to the broader public. For his research, he received substantive grants from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research and the Research Foundation Flanders.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Epistemic Condition, Jan Willem Wieland
1. Unwitting Wrongdoing, Reasonable Expectations, and Blameworthiness, William J. FitzPatrick
2. Akrasia, Awareness, and Blameworthiness, Matthew Talbert
3. When Ignorance is No Excuse, Maria Alvarez and Clayton Littlejohn
4. Vice, Blameworthiness, and Cultural Ignorance, Elinor Mason and Alan T. Wilson
5. Blame and Moral Ignorance, George Sher
6. When Is Failure to Realize Something Exculpatory?, Elizabeth Harman
7. On Knowing What's Right and Being Responsible For It, Paulina Sliwa
8. Explaining (Away) the Epistemic Condition of Moral Responsibility, Gunnar Bjornsson
9. The Epistemic Condition on Moral Blameworthiness, A Theoretical Epiphenomenon, Peter A. Graham
10. Hard to Know, Gwen Bradford
11. Intellectual Difficulty and Moral Responsibility, Alexander A. Guerrero
12. Moral Responsibility and Quality of Will, Michael J. Zimmerman
13. Ignorance, Revision, and Commonsense, Randolph Clarke
14. Methodological Conservatism and the Epistemic Condition, Neil Levy
15. Tracing the Epistemic Condition, Matt King
16. Blame Transfer, Jan Willem Wieland and Philip Robichaud
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