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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24075
Title: Psychopaths and Moral Responsibility
Authors: Dos Santos, Antonio
Advisor: Gedge, Elisabeth
Department: Philosophy
Keywords: Psychopaths;Moral Responsibility;Moral Capacities;Cognitive Empathy
Publication Date: 2018
Abstract: Psychopaths have traditionally been excluded from the moral realm and have regularly been used as a paradigm case for explaining why emotions, or emotional knowledge, is necessary for the acquisition of moral knowledge. Psychopaths possess an affective deficit that results in an almost total lack of empathy. Emotionists argue that emotions (specifically empathy) are central to moral understanding, and that, since the psychopaths possess this affective deficit, they lack the capacity to acquire moral knowledge which is necessary to be morally responsible. Given recent neurological findings regarding psychopaths, I ague that Emotionists cannot use the psychopath as a case example supporting their argument that emotions are necessary for moral knowledge. I argue that despite psychopaths’ affective disorder, they possess three of the capacities (via cognitive mechanisms) considered by many to be necessary for moral responsibility. Those three capacities are the capacity to acquire moral knowledge, the capacity to be reason-responsive to moral demands, and the capacity to control one’s actions in light of moral demands and reasons. The upshot of my analysis is a rethinking of what it means to possess the right kind of emotional knowledge and a rethinking of the capabilities of psychopaths in relation to the moral realm.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24075
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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