• J Lou@mastodon.social
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    9 months ago

    Who is responsible for smoking remains the same. It is just the legal consequences associated with that action that change.

    The kind of responsibility being discussed when someone neglects their duties is different from what is being discussed when we are talking about de facto responsibility.

    A group of people is de facto responsible for a result if it is a purposeful result of their joint intentional actions. Production is a planned and deliberate process. Workers are de facto responsible

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Who is responsible for smoking remains the same.

      The cigarette manufacturers? The retailers? The smokers themselves? Ad agencies? Nicotine? Workplace anxiety? Who IS responsible?

      The kind of responsibility being discussed when someone neglects their duties is different from what is being discussed when we are talking about de facto responsibility.

      It is not, because its not objectively certain where the buck stops.

      A group of people is de facto responsible for a result if it is a purposeful result of their joint intentional actions.

      A group of people can engage in individually virtuous actions while generating a villainous result. The classic example is the “Tragedy of the Commons”. Six individual shepherds grazing on a hill that can only support five flocks. Each doing an honest day’s work, but collectively destroying each others’ livelihoods.

      Individuals lack perfect information and cannot be held culpable for unforeseen consequences.

      • J Lou@mastodon.social
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        9 months ago

        The smoker is de facto responsible. Other kinds of responsibility could extend some blame to the manufacturers etc. Those are not responsibility in the de facto sense.

        For example, someone sells a car to a person that commits a crime using it; the car seller is not involved in the planning or execution of the crime. The car purchaser is solely de facto responsible for the crime. I am using responsibility in the narrow de facto sense.

        The tragedy of the commons is not a purposeful result

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          The smoker is de facto responsible.

          Then why do companies need to spend enormous sums on advertising and marketing?

          Those are not responsibility in the de facto sense.

          You seem to suggest there is no de facto responsibility for lying.

          someone sells a car to a person that commits a crime using it; the car seller is not involved in the planning or execution of the crime

          A mob boss throws one of his cronies the keys to his car. “If my rival ends up dead tomorrow, the car is yours. By the way, he’s going to be at the corner of 5th and Main tomorrow.”

          But he’s not de facto responsible, because he contracted a third party to handle the dirty work.

          The tragedy of the commons is not a purposeful result

          The tragedy of the commons is a foreseeable consequence of individual actions.

          You can see this play out in a game of Jenga. Everyone is pulling blocks out of the base of the tower. Asserting that the last person to pull a block is “de facto responsible” neglects culpability of each of the other participants.

          • J Lou@mastodon.social
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            9 months ago

            What do you mean?

            There is de facto responsibility (DFR) associated with any intentional action.

            The mob boss situation is different from the car situation I was presenting The mob boss and his crony are both jointly DFR. The mob boss participated in the planning of the crime. Furthermore, the situation is a conspiracy.

            Each party is DFR for their contribution to the tragedy of the commons at a bare minimum. DFR doesn’t subsume other notions of culpability

            • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              There is de facto responsibility (DFR) associated with any intentional action.

              An act performed under misinformation isn’t intentional.

              The mob boss situation is different

              Only because the mob boss’s intent is made explicit in the example. The same boss who owns a car dealership, and all his gang members just happen to get cheap cars there that they use to commit crimes, we’re back to your example.

              Each party is DFR for their contribution to the tragedy of the commons

              That doesn’t mean anything. There’s no logical consequence that flows from it.

              • J Lou@mastodon.social
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                9 months ago

                It depends on how the misinformation relates to the act. There can be cases where such an act is intentional

                That sounds like a conspiracy. There are cases where the DFR party isn’t imputed legal responsibility because there isn’t enough evidence to determine who is DFR. It means we don’t know not that there isn’t a fact of the matter.

                Natural resources are not fruits of labor. They should be socially owned. Each worker coop DFR for greenhouse gases would be liable to society