Litcius/Paper detail

Moral Entanglement: Taking Responsibility and Vicarious Responsibility

Trystan S. Goetze

2020The Monist25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract: Vicarious responsibility is sometimes analysed by considering the different kinds of agents involved—who is vicariously responsible for the actions of whom? In this paper, I discuss vicarious responsibility from a different angle: in what sense is the vicarious agent responsible? I do this by considering the ways in which one may take responsibility for events caused by another agent or process. I discuss three senses of taking responsibility—accepting fault, assuming obligations, and fulfilling obligations—and the forms of vicarious responsibility that correspond to these. I end by explaining how to judge which sense applies in a given case, based on the degree of (what I call) moral entanglement between the agent and what they should take responsibility for.

Topics & Concepts

Moral responsibilityCompatibilismCollective responsibilityPhilosophy of mindVicarious liabilityPsychologySocial psychologySocial responsibilityEpistemologySociologyPhilosophyPolitical scienceLawMetaphysicsLiabilityTortFree Will and AgencyWar, Ethics, and JustificationPhilosophical Ethics and Theory
Moral Entanglement: Taking Responsibility and Vicarious Responsibility | Litcius