Excuses and Alternatives
Date issued
February 23, 2021
In
Canadian Journal of Philosophy
Vol
1
No
51
From page
1
To page
16
Subjects
PAP
eligibility
excuses
exemptions
robustness
Frankfurt cases
moral luck
Abstract
A version of the principle of alternate possibilities (PAP) claims that one is only blameworthy for actions which one was able to avoid. Much of the discussion about PAP concerns Frankfurt’s counterexamples to it. After fifty years of refined debates, progress might seem hopeless. Yet, we can make headway by asking: “what’s our reason for believing PAP?” The best answer is this: lacking eligible alternatives—alternatives whose cost is not too high to reasonably opt for—is a good excuse. Yet, this principle is subject to straightforward counterexamples, unless it is given an epistemicised reading. And in this latter case, it does not support PAP. So, PAP is unsupported, at least for now.
Later version
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/canadian-journal-of-philosophy/article/excuses-and-alternatives/64C9EA76964F1B7AF271A78109F8B66E#article
Publication type
journal article
File(s)
