توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Not In Their Name: Are Citizens Culpable For Their States' Actions?
نام کتاب : Not In Their Name: Are Citizens Culpable For Their States' Actions?
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : نه به نام آنها: آیا شهروندان مقصر اقدامات دولت خود هستند؟
سری : New Topics in Applied Philosophy
نویسندگان : Holly Lawford-Smith
ناشر : Oxford University Press
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 194
ISBN (شابک) : 0198833660 , 9780198833666
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 1 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Not In Their Name: Are Citizens Culpable For Their States’ Actions?
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
1: Introduction
2: What is The State?
I. The Options
II. Citizen-Inclusive States
III. Membership: Location, Legal Status, Relations, Causal Contribution
IV. Membership: Normative Interaction, Duty Transferral
V. States as the Formal Apparatus of Governance
3: Is the Citizen-Inclusive State an Agent?
I. Strong Accounts of Collective Agency
II. Moderate Accounts of Collective Agency
III. Weak Accounts of Collective Agency
IV. Collective Agency and Collective Moral Agency
V. Citizen-Inclusive States as Agents: The Upshot
4: Is the Citizen-Exclusive State an Agent?
I. The Structure of the Citizen-Exclusive State
II. From Decision to Action (Intention and Implementation)
III. Subordinates as Extended Minds
IV. Is the Citizen-Exclusive State an Agent?
V. Is the Citizen-Exclusive State a Moral Agent?
VI. Relationship between the Citizen-Exclusive State and Its Citizens
5: Citizens’ Culpability and Responsibility for States’ Actions
Part One: Culpability
I. Citizens’ Culpability for States’ Actions
II. A Thought Experiment Three Ways
III. Responsibility for Weak Shared Agency
IV. One-Off and Episodic Agency, or, Culpability for Joint Action
V. Citizens are not Culpable for States’ Actions
Part Two: Responsibility
VI. Commissioning, Coercion, Complicity
Commissioning
Coercion
Complicity
VII. Association, Benefiting, Privilege, Capacity
Association
Benefiting
Privilege
Capacity
VIII. A Note on Comparative Demandingness
IX. Citizen Responsibility in Summary
6: Governmental Culpability
I. Collective Punishment: Some Clarifications
II. The Challenge: Group and Member Culpability
III. Corporations, Armies, Governments
IV. Collective Culpability and Distributed Punishment
V. Getting Members off the Hook
VI. Double-Counting Responsibility
7: Conclusion
References
Index