Causation and Responsibility
An Essay in Law, Morals, and Metaphysics
Michael S. Moore
Table of Contents
I. The Role of Causation in Moral and Legal Responsibility
1:The Embedding of Causation in Legal Liability Doctrines
2:Causation and Moral Blameworthiness
3:Causation and the Permissibility of Consequentialist Justification within Agent-Relative Morality and the Law
II. Presuppositions about the Nature of Causation by Legal Doctrines
4:The Law's Own Characterizations of its Causal Requirements
5:The Prima Facie Demands of the Law on the Concept of Causation
6:Pruning the Law's Demands on a Concept of Causation
III. The First Blind Alley: The Attempt to Replace Proximate Causation with Culpability as a Prerequisite for Legal Liability
7:'Negligence in the Air Will Not Do'
8:Conceptual Problems in Applying the Harm-within-the- Risk Test to Crimes/Torts of Negligence
9:Normative Problems in Applying the Harm-within-the- Risk Test to Crimes/Torts of Negligence
10:The Descriptive Inaccuracy of the Harm-within-the- Risk Analysis as Measuring Proximate Causation
IV. The Legal Presupposition of There Being 'Intervening Causes'
11:The Legal Doctrines of Intervening Causation
12:The Lack of any Metaphysical Basis for the Doctrines of Intervening Causation
13:The Superfluity of Accomplice Liability
V. The Metaphysics of Causal Relata
14:A Prolegomenon to the Issue of Causal Relata
15:The Facts, Events, States of Affairs, and Tropes Debate
VI. The Metaphysics of the Causal Relation
16:Counterfactual Conditionals
17:The Counterfactual Theory of Causation
18:The Role of Counterfactual Dependence as an Independent, Non-causal Desert-determiner
19:Generalist Theories of Causation
20:Singularist Theories of Causation
Appendix
Contract Law and Causation: An Illustration
Bibliography