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    By the Simple View, if the agent φ's intentionally, the a... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Challenges→The Simple View is false.

    By the Simple View, if the agent φ's intentionally, the agent intended to φ; and since the same reasoning applies to Θ, the agent also intended to Θ.

    Moral ResponsibilityPhilosophy of Language
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    Moral ResponsibilityPhilosophy of Language

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    If the agent succeeds in φing through skill and not accident, then the...86%If an agent F-ed for the purpose of G-ing, then the act of F-ing is id...81%In a Bratman case, the agent merely intends to try to φ and intends to...81%Defeating the Simple View is compatible with there being a causal anal...80%

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    The simplest version of such an account depends on what Michael Bratman has dubbed “the Simple View.” This is the thesis that proposition (6) above, [The agent G'd intentionally] and, correspondingly, proposition (7) [The agent Fed with the intention of Ging] entail that, at the time of action, the agent intended to G. Surely, from the causalist point of view, the most natural account of Ging intentionally is that the action of Ging is governed by a present directed intention whose content for t

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