Mayr E (2019)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2019
DOI: 10.1080/13869795.2019.1599047
Constitutivists about moral norms are often suspected of providing an overly “self-centered” account of morality which does not take seriously enough morality’s interpersonal nature. This worry seems particularly pressing in the light of recent debates about the relational character of many moral norms. In this paper, I discuss one aspect of this worry, which concerns the special standing to complain which the victims of wrongdoing have. I argue that, contrary to appearances, Kantian constitutivism can explain this latter feature, since there is a special need for remedying the denial of equal moral standing of the victim and the impairment of the victim’s agency which any wrongdoing involves.
APA:
Mayr, E. (2019). Blame for constitutivists: Kantian constitutivism and the victim’s special standing to complain. Philosophical Explorations. https://doi.org/10.1080/13869795.2019.1599047
MLA:
Mayr, Erasmus. "Blame for constitutivists: Kantian constitutivism and the victim’s special standing to complain." Philosophical Explorations (2019).
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