Accountability and Intervening Agency: An Asymmetry between Upstream and Downstream Actors

Utilitas 29 (1):110-114 (2017)
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Abstract

Suppose someone (P1) does something that is wrongful only in virtue of the risk that it will enable another person (P2) to commit a wrongdoing. Suppose further that P1’s conduct does indeed turn out to enable P2’s wrongdoing. The resulting wrong is agentially mediated: P1 is an enabling agent and P2 is an intervening agent. Whereas the literature on intervening agency focuses on whether P2’s status as an intervening agent makes P1’s conduct less bad, I turn this issue on its head by investigating whether P1’s status as an enabling agent makes P2’s conduct more bad. I argue that it does: P2 wrongs not just the victims of ϕ but P1 as well, by acting in a way that wrongfully makes P1 accountable for ϕ. This has serious implications for compensatory and defensive liability in cases of agentially mediated wrongs.

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Saba Bazargan-Forward
University of California, San Diego

Citations of this work

Interpersonal Moral Luck and Normative Entanglement.Daniel Story - 2019 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 6:601-616.

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References found in this work

The basis of moral liability to defensive killing.Jeff McMahan - 2005 - Philosophical Issues 15 (1):386–405.
Causation in the Law.F. S. McNeilly - 1962 - Philosophical Quarterly 12 (46):92-94.
The value of inviolability.Thomas Nagel - 2008 - In Paul Bloomfield (ed.), Morality and Self-Interest. New York: Oxford University Press.
Intervening agents and moral responsibility.Michael J. Zimmerman - 1985 - Philosophical Quarterly 35 (141):347-358.

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