Logo Grin

Jill Rusin (Wilfred Laurier University)

Quand :
4 avril 2014 @ 10:00 – 12:00
2014-04-04T10:00:00-04:00
2014-04-04T12:00:00-04:00
Où :
Salle 309
2910 Boulevard Edouard-Montpetit
Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC H3T 1J7
Canada

PRIÈRE DE NOTER QUE CETTE ACTIVITÉ EST ANNULÉE.

Dans le cadre des ateliers du GRIN, Jill Rusin (Wilfred Laurier University) offre une présentation intitulée: « Epistemic Access and Culpable Ignorance ».

Résumé:

Elizabeth Harman and Gideon Rosen disagree about whether moral ignorance exculpates. I examine their arguments and compare to a more moderate position, based on a ‘reasonable person’ interpretation of excusable ignorance. This view takes epistemic accessibility to be of significance to culpability. But I argue that a subject’s access needs to be assessed via relevant counterfactuals, not merely by narrow intuitions about ‘available evidence’, a suggestion motivated by looking at cases of ‘motivated ignorance’. This idea exposes what I take to be problematically artificial in how Harman and Rosen approach their disagreement: they stipulate adequate procedural management of the subjects’ beliefs as a background condition in cases they discuss. I find, however, that in certain significant cases, procedural mismanagement is explicable by the very reason that both explains the ignorance and makes it culpable.