Philosophy 290–6:
Permissibility, Meaning and Blame. Themes from the Recent Work of T.M. Scanlon
Mondays 2–4
234 Moses Hall
Jay Wallace
Office
hours and contact info: http://philosophy.berkeley.edu/people/detail/21
Niko Kolodny
Office hours and contact info: http://sophos.berkeley.edu/kolodny/
Description
What are we thinking about, when
we think about the "morality" of actions?
A theme of T.M. Scanlon's recent work is that we may be thinking about
more than one thing. On the one
hand, we may be trying to decide what to do. Within this deliberative perspective, Scanlon suggests, we focus on questions of permissibility. On the
other hand, we may be trying to come to terms with what someone's action says
about him, or about his relations to others. Within this evaluative perspective, we focus on questions of meaning.
Scanlon suggests that sustained
and careful attention to the distinction between permissibility and meaning, or
more broadly between the deliberative and evaluative perspectives, promises to
illuminate several central questions in ethics. Does what we intend affect
the morality of what we do? How
should we understand the resonant idea that morality is a matter of treating
people as "ends, not means"? What is blame? When
is it appropriate? Only when it is
for something freely chosen? Does what we ought to do depend on the facts, or only the evidence available to us? Does what we intend affect what we have reason to do?
Readings
To provide background, we will
review the central chapters of Scanlon's What We Owe to Each Other. Then
we will focus on Scanlon's unpublished book, Dimensions of Moral
Assessment: Meaning, Permissibility, and Blame. Readings are available on
the reserve shelf in the Howison Philosophy Library. The manuscript of Dimensions of Moral Assessment may also be downloaded from the "Resources" section
of the course's bspace page: http://bspace.berkeley.edu/. Enrolled students should already have
access. Other students should send
either their ID number or their official Berkeley email address to Niko.
Prerequisites
This is a graduate seminar. Enrollment is open only to (i) graduate
students in Philosophy and Logic and Methodology of Science and (ii) senior
philosophy majors with the consent of the instructors.
Requirements
á
All enrolled students are required to write a term
paper of 18 pages, due on May 12.
á
Enrolled graduate students are required, and auditing
graduate students are strongly encouraged, to present the reading at one of our
sessions. While presentations
should of course provide a brief summary of the reading, their main aim should
be to stimulate discussion by identifying the crucial issues. Presenters should meet with the
instructors on the Friday before their session to run through their approach.
Readings
Introductory meeting
Scanlon, What We Owe to Each
Other, Ch. 4
Scanlon, What We Owe to Each
Other, Ch. 5
Scanlon, Dimensions of Moral Assessment, Introduction and Ch. 1: "Permissibility and Intent
I: The Illusory Appeal of Double Effect"
Scanlon, Dimensions of Moral Assessment, Ch. 2: "Permissibility and Intent II: The
Significance of Intent"
Scanlon, Dimensions of Moral Assessment, Ch. 2: "Permissibility and Intent II: The
Significance of Intent"
Kolodny and McFarlane, "Ought:
Between Subjective and Objective"
Scanlon, Dimensions of Moral
Assessment, Ch. 3: "Means and Ends"
Scanlon, What We Owe to Each
Other, Ch. 6
Scanlon, Dimensions of Moral
Assessment, Ch. 4: "Blame"
Scanlon, Dimensions of Moral
Assessment, Ch. 4: "Blame"
Wallace, "Dispassionate
Opprobrium"
Scanlon, Dimensions of Moral
Assessment, Ch. 4: "Blame"
Scanlon, "Reasons: A Puzzling
Duality?"
Kolodny, "Aims as Reasons"