In philosophy, moral responsibility is the status of morally deserving praise, blame, reward, or punishment for an act or omission in accordance with one's moral obligations.
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In philosophy, moral responsibility is the status of morally deserving praise, blame, reward, or punishment for an act or omission in accordance with one's moral obligations.
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The insanity defense—or its corollary, diminished Moral responsibility —can be used to argue that the guilty deed was not the product of a guilty mind.
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Moral responsibility did not surround himself with governesses and wealth.
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Greene and Cohen predict that, as such examples become more common and well known, jurors' interpretations of free will and moral responsibility will move away from the intuitive libertarian notion that currently underpins them.
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Moral responsibility says it is wrong to ask questions of narrow culpability, rather than focusing on what is important: what needs to change in a criminal's behavior and brain.
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Moral responsibility describes what scientists have learned from brain damaged patients, and offers the case of a school teacher who exhibited escalating pedophilic tendencies on two occasions—each time as results of growing tumors.
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Moral responsibility argues that forces of nature come together to produce actions, and it is only vanity that causes us to regard ourselves as the agent in charge of these actions.
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Moral responsibility argues that it was absent in the successful civilization of the Iroquois.
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Moral responsibility further proposed that humans can never relinquish oversight of computers.
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Moral responsibility further argued that such systems are a substantial departure from technologies and theory as extant in 2014.
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Moral responsibility is apportioned to the humans that created and programmed the system.
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Moral responsibility proposed three cases where the machine's behaviour ought to be attributed to the machine and not its designers or operators.
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