Securing obligations: a reply to Hindriks
Mattias Gunnemyr, Caroline Torpe Touborg
Abstract
In his contribution to this special issue, Hindriks considers the Security Principle, an account of pro tanto obligations based on our account of reasons (Gunnemyr and Touborg 2023a). According to the Security Principle, you have a pro tanto obligation not to perform an action that makes a harm more secure. Hindriks raises two objections to this account. First, that it is too flexible; second, that it gives wrong verdicts when agents are robustly unwilling to act in a certain way. Here, we respond to Hindriks’ objections and argue that Hindriks’ account, the Threshold Principle, gives counterintuitive verdicts in preemption and low-probability cases.
Topics & Concepts
CounterintuitiveObligationHarmPreemptionAction (physics)Law and economicsLawDeadlockPolitical scienceComputer scienceEconomicsEpistemologyPhilosophyPhysicsQuantum mechanicsDistributed computingOperating systemFree Will and AgencyWar, Ethics, and JustificationPhilosophical Ethics and Theory