In Evangelos D. Protopapadakis & Georgios Arabatzis (eds.),
Modernity and Contemporaneity. The NKUA Applied Philosophy Research Lab Press. pp. 161-180 (
2022)
Copy
BIBTEX
Abstract
Both the genetic endowment we have been equipped with, and the environment we had to be born and raised in, were not – and never are – for us to choose; both are pure luck, a random ticket in this enormously inventive cosmic lottery of existence. If it is luck that has makes us the persons we are,
and since our decisions and choices depend largely on the kind of persons we are, it seems that everything we do or fail to do may only be attributed to luck. This paper focuses on criminal behavior, with special emphasis on Tarde’s and Lombroso’s views, to discuss free will and agency, and their interplay with moral luck, that is, the fixed boundaries set by our nature and the circumstances that surround us.