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    Ownership of actions consists in psychological continuity... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Both Y and Z may be morally responsible for X's crimes despite neither being identical with X

    Ownership of actions consists in psychological continuity with the original agent

    Moral ResponsibilityPersonal Identity
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    Moral ResponsibilityPersonal Identity

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    Both Y and Z are fully psychologically continuous with XBoth Y and Z may be morally responsible for X's crimes despite neither being ide...Ownership of actions is the necessary condition for moral responsibilityPsychological continuity need not obtain uniquely to ground moral responsibility

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    Therefore, psychological continuity alone cannot be sufficient for own...86%As long as those actions flowed from a central aspect of the agent's c...83%The psychological-continuity view generates a logical contradiction re...82%The psychological-continuity view entails the original person is both ...81%

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    SEP: identity-ethics
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    A second reply is reductionist, and it simply denies the slogan. In other words, identity is not necessary for moral responsibility. Instead (the reductionist could say), what matters is psychological continuity (or connectedness), regardless of whether it obtains uniquely. This allows the reductionist to handle the fission case in the following way: while neither Y nor Z is identical with X, both are fully psychologically continuous with him, and insofar as ownership of actions consists in

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