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Why is Willing Irrelevant to the Grounding of (Any) Obligation? Remarks on Arthur Ripstein’s Conception of Omni-Lateral Willing

The result's identifiers

  • Result code in IS VaVaI

    <a href="https://www.isvavai.cz/riv?ss=detail&h=RIV%2F68378122%3A_____%2F17%3A00477210" target="_blank" >RIV/68378122:_____/17:00477210 - isvavai.cz</a>

  • Result on the web

  • DOI - Digital Object Identifier

Alternative languages

  • Result language

    angličtina

  • Original language name

    Why is Willing Irrelevant to the Grounding of (Any) Obligation? Remarks on Arthur Ripstein’s Conception of Omni-Lateral Willing

  • Original language description

    Arthur Ripstein’s recent reconstruction of Kant’s legal philosophy seeks to place it beyond the crude dichotomy of positivism vs non-positivism in suggesting that legal obligation be accounted for in terms of omni-lateral willing, or the form of willing that pertains to coercive public institutions that are invested with moral authority. Thus, while residing in social institutions, omni-lateral willing realizes a genuinely moral demand, that is, the demand to secure equal freedom for autonomous agents in their mutual interaction. The paper probes the ability of omni-lateral authorization to overcome the dichotomy between positivism and non-positivism. I wish to suggest that omni-lateral willing disguises what legal and moral obligation have in common and conveys the impression that we, as agents, can be obligated in two distinct ways that are disconnected from one another. I will locate the reason for the misrepresentation in what appears to be a standard interpretation of the role of agent motivation in legal and moral obligation. Ripstein’s account appears to be presupposing the same picture, even as he tries to move beyond it. In the end I will be arguing that Ripstein is right in his diagnosis that individual willing falls short of grounding legal obligation. His mistake is to think that some other form of willing can deliver the grounding question, because none can.

  • Czech name

  • Czech description

Classification

  • Type

    C - Chapter in a specialist book

  • CEP classification

  • OECD FORD branch

    50501 - Law

Result continuities

  • Project

    <a href="/en/project/GA15-23955S" target="_blank" >GA15-23955S: THE ROLE OF PROPORTIONALITY IN CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS ADJUDICATION</a><br>

  • Continuities

    P - Projekt vyzkumu a vyvoje financovany z verejnych zdroju (s odkazem do CEP)

Others

  • Publication year

    2017

  • Confidentiality

    S - Úplné a pravdivé údaje o projektu nepodléhají ochraně podle zvláštních právních předpisů

Data specific for result type

  • Book/collection name

    Freedom and Force: Essays on Kant’s Legal Philosophy

  • ISBN

    978-1-84946-316-4

  • Number of pages of the result

    15

  • Pages from-to

    113-127

  • Number of pages of the book

    240

  • Publisher name

    Hart Publishing

  • Place of publication

    Oxford

  • UT code for WoS chapter