Actualism without actions

An oft-missed insight in the Actualism-Possibilism debate is that it brings to focus the relationship between actions and their consequences. Namely, an action makes a difference in what consequences obtain. The difference-making role of action is underwritten by analysing its consequences in counte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Relador, Jean Aldrin Concepcion
Other Authors: Andrew T. Forcehimes
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147358
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:An oft-missed insight in the Actualism-Possibilism debate is that it brings to focus the relationship between actions and their consequences. Namely, an action makes a difference in what consequences obtain. The difference-making role of action is underwritten by analysing its consequences in counterfactual terms (§1). However, there is evidence for rejecting the claim that action is the primary object of moral evaluation in the debate. Namely, the evidence that human beings are clumsy and the world is chancy. Such evidence shows that most counterfactuals including action-predicating counterfactuals are false (§2). Then we can undermine the difference-making relationship between an action and its consequences. On these grounds, I argue that the primary object of moral evaluation cannot be an action and so it should be revised. My argument has two implications (§3). First, its result can break the stalemate within the debate in favour of Actualism. Second, we can frame the debate in different terms rather than the alternatives-based approach.