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Teaching Rational Entitlement and Responsibility: A Socratic Exercise
Author(s) -
David Godden
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
informal logic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.368
H-Index - 15
eISSN - 2293-734X
pISSN - 0824-2577
DOI - 10.22329/il.v34i1.3882
Subject(s) - entitlement (fair division) , obligation , socratic method , moral obligation , rationality , politics , psychology , social psychology , norm (philosophy) , political science , law , economics , mathematical economics
The paper reports on a Socratic exercise that introduces participants to the norm of rational entitlement, as distinct from political entitlement, and the attendant norm of rational responsibility. The exercise demonstrates that, because participants are not willing to exchange their own opinion at random for another differing opinion to which the owner is, by the participants’ own admission, entitled, they treat their entitlement to their own opinion differently, giving it a special status. This gives rise to rational obligations such as the obligation to provide reasons, and a willingness to risk those opinions to the force of the better reason.

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