Hume's Theory of Moral Responsibility: Some Unresolved Matters

Dialogue 31 (1):3- (1992)
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Abstract

One reaction to the theory of moral responsibility Hume presentsis that the theory cannot be reconciled with his remarks about the self in Treatise, Book One. Hume declared a self or person to be nothing but a bundle of transient perceptions, arguing further that there is no one perception that continues invariably the same at any two moments of time. It would follow from such a view that, since one and the same bundle cannot logically exist at two distinct moments, and hence a person at t1 is distinct and different from a person at t2, it is logically impossible, even unjust, to ascribe responsibility to a person at a later time for, say, a moral crime committed at a previous time. The reason is that the individual to whom responsibility will be ascribed is the successor of the criminal and not the criminal himself. But since this runs counter to our moral practices of making accountable the perpetrators of crimes, Hume would therefore have to give up or at least revise his theory of the self if he is to discuss intelligibly the issue of individual moral responsibility.

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References found in this work

Free will as involving determinism.Philippa Foot - 1957 - Philosophical Review 66 (October):439-50.
Free Will Involving Determinism.Philippa Foot - 1957 - Philosophical Review 66 (4):439.
Hume's ontological commitments.Wade L. Robison - 1976 - Philosophical Quarterly 26 (102):39-47.
Hume's Scepticism.Wade L. Robison - 1973 - Dialogue 12 (1):87-99.

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