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  1. Against the Evidence-Relative View of Liability to Defensive Harm.Eduardo Rivera-López & Luciano Venezia - 2024 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 18 (1):45-60.
    According to the evidence-relative view of liability to defensive harm, a person is so liable if and only if she acts in a way that provides sufficient evidence to justify a (putative) victim’s belief that the person poses a threat of unjust harm, which may or may not be the case. Bas van der Vossen defends this position by analyzing, in relation to a version of Frank Jackson’s famous drug example, a case in which a putative murderer is killed by (...)
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  • Unjust combatants, special authority, and “transferred responsibility”.Luciano Venezia & Rodrigo Sánchez Brígido - 2022 - Philosophical Studies 179 (7):2187-2198.
    Yitzhak Benbaji argues that those combatants who have agreed to blindly obey their superiors and who are ordered to fight in unjust wars are released from their duty to deliberate about the merits of the acts that they are ordered to perform. This is because their agreements result in the combatants’ permissible lack of a necessary capacity for moral responsibility. Thus, the combatants are not morally responsible for their wrongful acts—their moral responsibility is “transferred” to their superiors. We argue, first, (...)
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