Michael McKenna, Conversation and Responsibility. Reviewed by Zac Cogley

Philosophy in Review 33 (6):480-482 (2013)
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Abstract

In this review I present the main claims of McKenna's book Conversation and Responsibility. There McKenna develops a theory of moral responsibility inspired by an analogy with the relationship people bear to each other as part of a conversational exchange. The first half of the book develops the conversational account and considers objections to it. In the second half of the book, McKenna turns to an examination of the kind of normative claim being made when we say that being morally responsible is to be understood in terms of appropriately holding someone morally responsible. I discuss the main themes of the book, how McKenna advances the literature on moral responsibility, and some challenges/limits of the view.

Author's Profile

Zac Cogley
Ohio State University (PhD)

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