The Moral Function of Standing to Blame

De Ethica 8 (4):25-42 (2025)
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Abstract

To have moral standing to blame is to have a right to blame. But what kind of right is it, and what follows from having or lacking standing? I will argue that the function of standing norms is to protect the freedom and interests of persons who are or could be blamed. Moral standing to blame, I will claim, is a power according to Wesley Hohfeld’s classification of rights. It is a normative power to call for an uptake of blame from someone who is liable to blame, i.e., someone who is blameworthy. I make three further claims in distinction to recent scholarship on standing: I argue that the concept of standing does not apply at all to private blame, only to expressed blame; I claim that standing cannot be understood as only a privilege-right; and I argue that there is not a conceptual asymmetry between standing to blame and standing to forgive.

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David Chelsom Vogt
University of Bergen

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