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Libertarians and others

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Libertarians and others Chisholm, Holbach and Frankfurt Roderick Chisholm A foundationalist (remember?). Also an enthusiastic defender of the primacy of raw ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Libertarians and others


1
Libertarians and others
  • Chisholm, Holbach and Frankfurt

2
Roderick Chisholm
  • A foundationalist (remember?).
  • Also an enthusiastic defender of the primacy of
    raw experience in epistemology.
  • Also a libertarian.

3
Human freedom and the self
  • The Dilemma Both determinism and indeterminism
    rule out responsibility.
  • The main idea Humans can, as free agents,
    initiate new causal chains.
  • The question What is it about the self that
    makes this new causal chain attributable to the
    self, in a way that justifies blame or praise for
    the action that initiates the new chain of
    causes?

4
Following along with Chisholm
  • Conditions for responsibility
  • Wholly up to the agent.
  • Could have done otherwise.
  • What youre responsible for is the result of
    (brought about by) some act of yours.
  • That act must be in your power to perform or not
    to perform.
  • 4 implies that the act isnt determined by any
    event that isnt also within your control
    including your desires and beliefs.

5
Overcome
  • Consider a dam, caused to fail by a flood It
    simply had to fail, in the circumstances.
    Similarly,
  • If the flood of desire caused the weak-willed
    man to give in, then he, too, had to do just what
    it was that he did do and he was no more
    responsible than was the dam for the results that
    followed

6
The flip side
  • Good character, if it causes you to do good
    things (i.e. leaves you no option but to do
    them), prevents you from being responsible for
    doing those good things!
  • (Reid) Catos constitution is no more the
    work of Cato than his existence.
  • The implication for theism (via Aquinas) If
    every movement proceeds from God as the prime
    mover, then God is the only agent!

7
The compatibilist move
  • The key premise Could have done otherwise
    would have done otherwise, had s/he chosen to
  • This is consistent with determinism.
  • But Chisholm claims that the second phrase could
    be true even when in fact the first phrases is
    false, that is, it can be true that I would have
    done otherwise than I did, in some case, even
    though, in the circumstances, I could not do
    otherwise.
  • So Chisholm rejects the compatibilists premise.

8
Making a case against compatibilism
  • If youd chosen otherwise, you would have done
    something different.
  • But in fact you couldnt choose otherwise (for
    example, your character or beliefs, which arent
    under your control at the time of the choice,
    caused you to choose as you did).
  • Then you are caught up in causal chains that
    include these features of yourself, and given
    these causes, you really couldnt do otherwise.

9
Choosing to choose?
  • Theres a regress in the air here.
  • A real choice (a free choice) seems to require
    (see the earlier definition) control over all the
    factors that cause that choice.
  • And this includes beliefs, desires and character.
  • So you must control these things, and whatever
    causes them, and so on, if they cause you to
    choose as you do.
  • Thats a lot of control!

10
Between determinism and indeterminism
  • If theres no cause of an action, it seems
    fortuitous or capricious, and responsibility is
    out.
  • If there is a cause, it seems that (even if, had
    the agent chosen otherwise, s/he would have done
    otherwise) in fact s/he couldnt have chosen
    otherwise (the choice is causally determined,
    after all), and, again, responsibility is out.

11
Is there an alternative?
  • We need an event that contributes to the agents
    act, but that isnt caused by another event.
  • Instead, its caused by the agent herself.
  • Usually, we speak of events as caused by other
    events
  • the occurrence of a cold night caused the water
    in the bird bath to freeze
  • The sudden creation of a super-critical mass
    caused the nuclear device to explode.
  • But what is an agent, and how does it cause
    events?

12
Transuent and Immanent
  • Transuent causation links events or states of
    affairs together.
  • Immanent causation links an event or state of
    affairs to an agent who brings it about.
  • Chisholm says we can trace back, following the
    physiological transuent causes.
  • But at some point (in the brain?) we come to an
    event or state of affairs that is caused by the
    agent, and not by some other event or state of
    affairs.

13
Making happen vs. doing
  • To do something requires some awareness
    (intentionality) concerning what youre doing.
  • But to make something happen doesnt we make all
    kinds of things happen without being aware of
    them (or concerned about them).

14
But what is immanent causation
  • What do we mean when we say an agent caused an
    event (rather than an event causing it)?
  • How do we distinguish As causing an event in
    this way, from the event merely happening
    (spontaneously)?
  • Suarez the action is in reality nothing but the
    effect as it flows from the agent HUH?

15
The mystery of causation (again)
  • For Chisholm, its not any harder (or stranger)
    to explain agent causation than it is to explain
    ordinary transuent causation.
  • But even on a strictly Humean account of
    causation, what we say when we say that event A
    caused event B is that events of the A-type are
    always followed by B-type events.
  • Nothing this informative emerges from the claim
    that an agent A caused some event.

16
Hume vs. Reid
  • Chisholm cites Reid against Hume, suggesting that
    our awareness of our ability, as agents, to bring
    things about is the basis for our grasp of
    transuent causation.
  • But Hume actually argues against this view we
    arent, he said, conscious of our power to do
    things. If we were, we wouldnt be surprised by
    a sudden paralysisa stroke victim would
    immediately realize that she couldnt move her
    (say) left leg. Only experience teaches us what
    we can (or cant) do

17
Small Gods
  • If Chisholm is right, then, each of us, when we
    act, is a prime mover unmoved.
  • No set of statements about a mans desires,
    beliefs, and stimulus situation at any time
    implies any statement telling us what the man
    will try, set out, or undertake to do at that
    time.
  • Note how empty this is of any predictive power

18
Can desires incline without necessitating?
  • Chisholms public official
  • Can resist soliciting a bribe.
  • Cannot resist accepting a bribe (if its
    presented in the right way).
  • For Chisholm, this is the kind of case where we
    would say his motive (the desire for the bribe)
    inclines but doesnt necessitate, since he
    doesnt try to make the bribe come his way, but
    if it does come his way, he cant resist.

19
Baron dHolbach (1723-1789)
  • One of the Encyclopedists- a French enlightenment
    group led by Diderot and DAlembert.
  • A hard determinist He believed in a
    deterministic physics, and believed that this was
    incompatible with responsibility.

20
The view
  • We are complicated mechanism.
  • Our will is determined by our desires, beliefs
    and circumstances.
  • It is altered only by stronger, intervening
    desires etc.
  • This is hidden from us by our own complexity,
    which makes prediction very difficult.

21
Harry Frankfurt (1929- )
  • Emeritus Professor at Princeton.
  • A compatibilist, with a complex view of the
    conditions of freedom (including abilities to
    evaluate and motivate change in our lower-order
    preferences).
  • Wrote On Bullshit (2005)

22
Alternative Possibilities
  • The Principle We are morally responsible for
    doing X only if we could have done something
    else.
  • Frankfurt identifies a problem with this
    principle.
  • Circumstances can cut off alternatives for us
    without interfering with our ordinary
    choice-making processes.
  • In such cases, we are morally responsible even
    though we could not do anything else.

23
Constraint without coercion
  • Im in a room, the door is open, and it seems Im
    entirely free to stay.
  • But in fact, the door will close and lock if I
    attempt to leave.
  • But I dont attempt to leave.
  • Am I responsible for staying in the room?
  • Or, having decided to stay already, Im told Ill
    be killed if I leave.

24
The hidden intervenor
  • Black and Jones.
  • Black will ensure Jones does X if Jones doesnt
    choose to do X himself.
  • But Jones does do X by his own choice.
  • Still Jones had no alternative to doing X.
  • What explains Jones doing X here? The
    constraints (Blacks arrangements) dont his
    choice does. So (says F) hes responsible.

25
The alternative principle
  • A person is not morally responsible for what he
    has done if he did it only because he could not
    have done otherwise.

26
The problem of attribution
  • When we say that someone is responsible for
    something theyve done, we are committed to there
    being some connection between them as agents, and
    the action theyve performed.
  • Chisholm is concerned about this when he says
    that neither determinism nor indeterminism will
    do
  • Determinism puts what I do out of my control (we
    can trace it all back to things that Im clearly
    not responsible for)
  • And indeterminism also puts it out of my control
    one or another of the possibilities results, but
    I dont choose.

27
But
  • Chisholms appeal to transcendent, agent
    causation seems like a cheat.
  • Chisholm says that the agent begins a new causal
    chain, rather than that something merely happened
    spontaneously and without being causally
    determined.
  • But it does not explain how were supposed to
    tell the difference. In fact, it doesnt explain
    what the difference is at all.

28
The problem of the link
  • What we need to know here is both something
    metaphysical and something empirical.
  • First, we need to know about how an agent comes
    to make a choice and how that process is
    different from mere coin flip indeterminism.
  • Second, we need to know how we can tell the
    difference between these things. (And the
    difference had better be obvious, since we seem
    to make this distinction very naturally and very
    easily in practice.)

29
Why these requirements?
  • 1. Without a story that somehow links the agent
    to the choice in an explanatory way, the
    attribution of the choice to the agent (and the
    consequent assignment of responsibility to her)
    is utterly opaque.
  • By links in an explanatory way I mean that
    something about the agent should explain why she
    chose as she did.

30
Why, contd
  • As for the epistemic requirement, if we cant
    effectively distinguish chance from agent
    cases, we surely ought to be much more skeptical,
    reserved or modest than we usually are when we
    blame or praise someone for what theyve done.
  • Some would suggest the first person case is the
    key we know, in a special, privileged way, when
    weve made a choice rather than merely flipped a
    coin and we can then go on to attribute similar
    choice-processes to others on the grounds of the
    similarity of the cases and circumstances.

31
But
  • This move only makes sense if we can say what the
    difference is and show that it really is the sort
    of thing we could reliably detect, at least in
    our own case.
  • And just saying what the difference is, is
    already very difficult.
  • Some character of the agent must make the
    difference between the available choices.
  • But we cant say that a causal process leads the
    agent to become the kind of agent who makes one
    choice rather than anotherthis leads back to
    determinism!

32
Whence character?
  • Let character stand for the features of agents
    that explain why they make the choices they do.
  • So character grounds attributions of
    responsibility to agents by linking them to their
    choices.
  • If character results from natural, causal
    processes, were back to determinism.
  • But if character is just spontaneously there from
    the start, were back to indeterminism
  • Either way, how is it an agents fault that, by
    causes or just by chance, she has a character
    that leads her to do cruel things?

33
Oh, dear.
  • Appeal to agent causation is just a place-holder
    for a solution, not a solution in its own right.
  • When we try to fill that place-holder out, it
    leads right back to the original puzzle.
  • If were to be responsible for what it leads us
    to do, it looks like we need to form or choose
    our own character ourselves, in a way that were
    responsible for.
  • But theres a nasty regress here we need to
    invoke a prior character to make us responsible
    for how weve formed our character over time.

34
Who am I, anyway?
  • Leibniz was a non-causal determinist.
  • For him, what happens for each monad (a separate,
    independent atom) is fully determined by its
    internal law and its appetition, a force that
    drives it to express itself over time (its
    internal law, though, respects a harmony that all
    monads are set up to express).

35
Judas
  • For Leibniz, Judas is determined, according to
    his internal law, to betray Jesus. He must do
    it, else (says Leibniz) he would not be this
    Judas.
  • But this doesnt mean Judas isnt responsible for
    what he does.
  • After all, what he does is part and parcel of
    (and emerges from) who he is.

36
Character, again
  • It looks as though the libertarian has a hard
    time explaining how we can be ultimately
    responsible for our character we cant freely
    choose our characters, on pain of a regress.
  • On the other hand, who is each of us, if not a
    person with a certain character?
  • Can an initial self, the ultimate source of the
    choices that we take ourselves to be responsible
    for, be responsible for the character that s/he
    begins with?

37
A fallback position
  • Perhaps the best thing to say is that we are
    responsible for our choices insofar as who we are
    is what leads us to choose as we do.
  • Though we didnt choose to become who we are, the
    process of becoming our (present) selves (our
    history as persons) is shaped by who we had
    (already) become before.
  • This view of persons traces their present
    character back to previous experiences and
    choices grounded in a previous character.
  • But it is a view we can only take looking
    backwards.
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