<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0120-0062</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Ideas y Valores]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Ideas y Valores]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0120-0062</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Facultad de Ciencias Humanas, Departamento de Filosofía.]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0120-00622009000300005</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Reasons And Real Selves]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[Razones y yos reales]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[VARGAS]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[MANUEL]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universiy of San Francisco Department of Philosophy ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
<country>E.E. U.U.</country>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>12</month>
<year>2009</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>12</month>
<year>2009</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>58</volume>
<numero>141</numero>
<fpage>67</fpage>
<lpage>84</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0120-00622009000300005&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0120-00622009000300005&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0120-00622009000300005&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[Most accounts of responsibility begin from either of two prominent points of departure: the idea that an agent must have some characterological or expressive connection to the action, or alternately, the idea that an agent must be in some sense responsive to reasons. Here, I will argue that the relation between these two approaches to moral responsibility is much more complicated than is ordinarily assumed. I shall argue that there are reasons to think that one of these views may ultimately collapse into the other, and if not, that there is nevertheless reason to think one of these views has misidentified the features of agency relevant to moral responsibility. The view that follows is one that we might call the primacy of reasons. In the second half of the article I consider whether recent experimental work speaks in favor of the alternative to the primacy of reasons. Its proponents argue that it does. I argue that it does not.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[La mayoría de las teorías sobre la responsabilidad parten de uno de dos puntos prominentes: la idea de que el agente debe tener alguna conexión caracterológica o expresiva con la acción o, alternativamente, la idea de que el agente debe responder en algún sentido a razones. Defenderé que la relación entre estos dos caminos hacia la responsabilidad moral es mucho más complicada de lo que se asume normalmente, y que hay razones para pensar que uno de estos caminos puede terminar colapsando en el otro o, si no, que de todas maneras hay razones para pensar que uno de estos puntos de vista ha identificado incorrectamente las características de la agencia relevantes para la responsabilidad moral. El punto de vista que sigue es uno que puede ser llamado la primacía de las razones. En la segunda mitad del artículo examino si el trabajo experimental reciente habla a favor de la alternativa a la primacía de las razones: sus proponentes dicen que lo hace, yo defiendo que no.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[moral responsibility]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Harry Frankfurt]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[reasons responsiveness]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[real self]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[experimental philosophy]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[responsabilidad moral]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[Harry Frankfurt]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[respuesta a razones]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[yo real]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[filosofía experimental]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font face="verdana" size="2">      <p align="center"><font size="4"><b>Reasons And Real Selves</b></font></p>     <p align="center">   <font size="3">Razones y yos reales</font></p>     <p align="center">&nbsp;</p> </font>      <p align="right"><font size="2" face="verdana"><b>MANUEL VARGAS</b>    <br> Department of Philosophy    <br> Universiy of San Francisco - E.E. U.U.    <br> <a href="mailto:mrvargas@usfca.edu"><i>mrvargas@usfca.edu</i></a></font></p>  <font face="verdana" size="2"> <hr size="1"> <b>Abstract</b> </font>    <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Most accounts of responsibility begin from either of  two prominent points of departure: the idea that an agent must have some  characterological or expressive connection to the action, or alternately, the idea that an agent  must be in some sense responsive to reasons. Here, I will argue that the relation  between these two approaches to moral responsibility is much more complicated than is  ordinarily assumed. I shall argue that there are reasons to think that one of these  views may ultimately collapse into the other, and if not, that there is nevertheless  reason to think one of these views has misidentified the features of agency relevant to moral  responsibility. The view that follows is one that we might call <i>the primacy of reasons</i>. In the second half of  the article I consider whether recent experimental work speaks in  favor of the alternative to the primacy of reasons. Its proponents argue that it  does. I argue that it does not. </font></p>     <blockquote>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2"><i>Keywords</i>: moral responsibility, Harry Frankfurt, reasons responsiveness, real self, experimental philosophy. </font></p> </blockquote> <font face="verdana" size="2"> <hr size="1">  </font>     <p><b><font size="2" face="verdana">Resumen</font></b></p>      <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">  La mayor&iacute;a de las teor&iacute;as  sobre la responsabilidad parten de uno de dos puntos prominentes: la idea de que  el agente debe tener alguna conexi&oacute;n caracterol&oacute;gica o expresiva con la acci&oacute;n o,  alternativamente, la idea de que el agente debe responder en alg&uacute;n sentido a razones.  Defender&eacute; que la relaci&oacute;n entre estos dos caminos hacia la responsabilidad moral es  mucho m&aacute;s complicada de lo que se asume normalmente, y que hay razones para  pensar que uno de estos caminos puede terminar colapsando en el otro o, si  no, que de todas maneras hay razones para pensar que uno de estos puntos de  vista ha identificado incorrectamente las caracter&iacute;sticas de la agencia relevantes para  la responsabilidad moral. El punto de vista que sigue es uno que puede ser llamado <i>la primac&iacute;a de las razones</i>. En la segunda mitad del art&iacute;culo examino si el trabajo  experimental reciente habla a favor de la alternativa a la primac&iacute;a de las razones:  sus proponentes dicen que lo hace, yo defiendo que no.</font></p>      <blockquote>       <p><font face="verdana" size="2">     <i>Keywords</i>: responsabilidad moral, Harry Frankfurt, respuesta a razones, yo real, filosof&iacute;a experimental. </font></p> </blockquote> <font face="verdana" size="2"> <hr size="1">      <p><b>1. Real Selves and Reasons: Some initial  considerations</b></p> </font>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">One inspiration for those accounts of responsibility  that emphasize   a characterological or expressive connection between  agent and action is the idea that it can only make sense to hold  someone   responsible if the action in some way expresses a deep  fact about the   particular agent. Contemporary versions have variously  emphasized   that the agent needs to &quot;identify&quot; with the motives  that lead to the   act, or the act has to be expressive of a &quot;Real Self&quot;  or the agent&#39;s values,   or the action has to be an expression of the regard in  which the   agent holds others.<a href="#1" name="s1"><sup>1</sup></a> Following the customary  parlance given to us   by Susan Wolf, I will call such accounts Real Self  views, or RS views   (<i>cf. </i>Wolf 1990). The label is imperfect, for it  is not obvious that all accounts   that appeal to a condition of identification or  self-expression   need to be committed to the existence of a &quot;real self&quot;  in any substantive   way. Nevertheless, it is a serviceable misnomer  because it   emphasizes the idea of some special or privileged  subset of psychological   states in relation to which the agent&#39;s actions must  stand for there to be responsibility.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">If RS accounts emphasize that the mark of responsible  agency is   the presence of psychological structures that,  roughly, express some   privileged view of the agent&#39;s, the mark of its  alternative &mdash;Reasons   accounts&mdash; is the presence of a particular power to  respond to the   world. On these latter accounts, the agential  contribution to responsibility   is a power to respond to the reasons that arise from  the   world or the agent&#39;s psychology&#39;s interaction with the  world. On   this account, what makes responsible agency  distinctive is that the   agent&#39;s response to the world is structured by reasons  in a particular   way. It is not the projection of the agent&#39;s identity or  convictions that   makes action responsible but rather how the agent&#39;s  actions express (or don&#39;t) due sensitivity to reasons.<a href="#2" name="s2"><sup>2</sup></a></font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Characterized in this way, the difference between RS  accounts and Reasons accounts may seem extraordinarily thin.  One might wonder whether the manner in which one responds to  reasons is just a way of expressing one&#39;s character, commitments, or  values. And, one might suspect that one&#39;s character, commitments  and values say something about what the agent regards as  reasons-giving. If so, then even if RS views and Reasons accounts can claim  to have different points of theoretical departure, those departure  points are surely not far apart. At the very least it suggests that the  subject matter of theories of moral responsibility is not so bifurcated  as to suggest that there are distinct phenomena that are mistakenly given  the single label of &#39;moral responsibility&#39;.</font></p>      <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana"> Whatever the similarity of the starting points, RS  approaches   face some distinctive worries. Consider, for example,  a paradigmatic   RS account &mdash;Harry Frankfurt&#39;s, as presented in the  1971 article   &quot;Freedom of the Will and the Concept of a Person&quot;  (henceforth:   FWCP). On Frankfurt&#39;s  account, an agent is responsible for some action   if and only if at the time of action the agent had a  particular   second order desire &mdash;<i>i. e.</i>, a desire that the  motivating first order   desire be effective in action. Notice that the higher  order desire need   not be causally efficacious itself&mdash; it could be &quot;along  for the ride,&quot;   so to speak, and its presence or absence might play no  causal role   in whether the agent acts on some particular first  order desire. So,   on Frankfurt&#39;s  account, a willing addict is morally responsible for a   decision to take the drug even if the higher order  desire that one act   on the drug-taking desire plays no causal or  explanatory role in the   taking of the drug.</font></p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Frankfurt&#39;s account and its  subsequent developments have been   construed in different ways &mdash;as, for example, a  picture of autonomy,   of free will, of responsible agency, of &quot;strong  agency&quot; and so on.<a href="#3" name="s3"><sup>3</sup></a> Construed as an account of the kind of agency required  for moral   responsibility, however, the picture in &quot;Freedom of  the Will&quot; provides   at least three reasons for consternation. First, on Frankfurt&#39;s   account, all that matters for securing responsibility  is the presence   of the requisite psychological structure, regardless  of its origin. This   entails some startlingly counterintuitive  possibilities. For example,   an agent that has an alien set of values transplanted  by coercive   indoctrination, brainwashing, or (currently science  fictional) neurological   implantation would, it seems, count as  straightforwardly   responsible for any action subsequent to the  implantation. Second,   an insufficiently knowledgeable, or a systematically  delusional agent,   is hardly a model of responsibility, no matter how  self-identified.<a href="#4" name="s4"><sup>4</sup></a> Yet, on Frankfurt&#39;s  account it seems that we must say that such an   agent is a responsible agent. A natural way to respond  to such worries   is to appeal to the rationality of the agent&#39;s  beliefs, or to a connection   between agents, norms, and the structure of the world.  But if we   supplement the account in this way, then it looks less  distinctive as an alternative to reasons accounts. Thirdly, the account is silent on the   matter of why, precisely, it is that second order  desires are the sort of   thing that provide a basis for moral responsibility.<a href="#5" name="s5"><sup>5</sup></a> A second order   desire is still a desire, and the fact of it being of  the second order does   not seem to, by itself, constitute any reason to  regard it as expressing   where the agent stands. One way of understanding the  criticism is   that it is unclear why the fact of where some agent  stands, were it tractable   in terms of hierarchies of desires, should be the kind  of thing in virtue of which moral praise and blame make sense.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">I wish to focus on this latter criticism, that we need  some account   of why those psychological elements identified by a RS  account are   sufficient for grounding the appropriateness of praise  and blame.   One way to appreciate the force of the worry is to  consider an appeal   to psychological states that are manifestly irrelevant  to grounding   moral praise and blame. For example, if someone were  to argue that it   was hierarchies of jealousy, or hierarchies of  beliefs, or hierarchies of   hunger that determined the appropriateness of moral  responsibility,   we would surely demand an explanation of why such  things relevant   to moral responsibility at all. In the case of  desires, the idea that they   have some connection to warranting praise and blame is  an old one.   Nevertheless, we can and should ask <i>why </i>hierarchies of desires  should be the sort of things that warrant praise and blame.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">There are a number of things the Real Self theorist  might say   in the face of this challenge.<a href="#6" name="s6"><sup>6</sup></a> For example, perhaps the  reason why   higher order capacities are significant for moral  responsibility is precisely   because they reflect some further fact about the  agent, and in   virtue of that further fact, praise and blame come to  make sense.   Frankfurt suggests something very  much like this in the context of   considering whether creatures other than humans might  count as   having higher order desires. He writes &quot;No animal  other than man,   however, appears to have the capacity for reflective  self-evaluation   that is manifested in the formation of second-order  desires&quot;   (Frankfurt 12). If I  understand Frankfurt rightly, his claim is  that   there is a comparatively unusual capacity required  before one can have second-order desires, something he calls &quot;the capacity for reflective self-evaluation&quot;. It is this capacity that  sets humans apart   from other animals, and in virtue of which we come to  be able to   have second-order desires. Higher order desires are a  kind of proof   for its existence, for one could not have such desires  without a capacity   for reflective self-evaluation. So, perhaps, the  thought is that those capacities are part of what makes the presence  or absence of hierarchies of desire relevant for moral responsibility. </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">The existence of this enabling capacity raises some  puzzles about   Frankfurt&#39;s account. In  particular: what is doing the explanatory or   normative work in the account? If higher order  evaluations are really   products of some more basic feature, why not look to  that distinctive   capacity as the locus of freedom, personhood, and moral  responsibility?   Indeed, what seems to give those higher order desires  any force   or relevance at all for the matter of responsibility  is that they are   the products of reflective self-evaluation. For  example, if they were   simply brute desires, or products of unmediated  instinct, it would be   difficult to see how they could support the  distinction Frankfurt is   looking for, one where on one side we have  unremarkable animals,   and on the other side we have agents capable of  personhood, freedom,   and moral responsibility. What makes second-order  desires   special seems to be precisely that they are the  products of reflective   self-evaluation. So, perhaps what Frankfurt <i>should </i>have said is that   it is not second-order desires, per se, that matter  for distinguishing   responsible agents from nonresponsible agents.  Responsible agents   are, in some way, a byproduct of a more fundamentally  important   capacity, and it is something about this underlying  capacity that makes sense of the appropriateness of praising and blaming. </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">One consequence of replying in this way is that Frankfurt&#39;s   account threatens to collapse into a <i>de facto </i>Reasons account. It is   difficult to see how the capacity for self-reflection  is not just self-directed   rational assessment. Frankfurt&#39;s  &quot;reflective self-evaluation&quot;   seems to be a self-aware, self-directed form of those  capacities   emphasized by Reasons accounts: <i>i. e.</i>, reflective  self-control, or   the capacity to recognize and appropriately respond to  reasons.<a href="#7" name="s7"><sup>7</sup></a> To be sure, he seems to have in mind a particular  subset, or perhaps   a particular application of those abilities &mdash;namely,  those tied to selfawareness.   Still, ultimately we are left with an appeal to a  species   of rational power. If so, then we have come to the  startling conclusion that Frankfurt&#39;s  account is really committed to a species of the Reasons approach. </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">The foregoing suggests that the paradigmatic RS  account is not   itself a genuine, distinctive option in the way  ordinarily regarded   in the literature.<a href="#8" name="s8"><sup>8</sup></a> This might in turn suggest  a view we can call <i>the</i>   <i>primacy of reasons</i>. On this view, our  rational capacities are central   to moral responsibility, and purportedly alternative  accounts will,   on closer inspection, either smuggle in a commitment  to rational   capacities or prove to be inadequate. In the face of  such a view, one   could rightly object that even if one accepts that Frankfurt&#39;s account   is vulnerable to concerns about its force deriving  from the role of   rational powers, this need not be true of any and  every RS account.   It would require a good deal more discussion than I  have offered   here to show that other or all RS accounts ultimately  bottom out   into a story of rational powers. Fair enough. Still,  we might take the   present reflections to generate a challenge to extant  RS accounts: is   there any reason to think that the psychological  features highlighted   by one&#39;s preferred RS account have some special  status, apart from   their genesis in the rational faculties of agents? Put  differently, what   RS theorists need are two interconnected things: (1)  an account of   why the psychological structures they identify are the  kinds of things   in virtue of which agents can be responsible, and (2)  an explanation   of why the normative relevance of those structures is  not ultimately   parasitic on, or reducible to the exercise of the  capacities that constitute the heart of Reasons accounts.</font></p> <font size="2" face="verdana">     <p><b>2. A</b><b> new argument for RS  theories?</b></p> </font>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Going forward, I will assume that RS accounts face the  twopronged   challenge mentioned above. Now I wish to consider one   way in which the proponents of RS accounts might  reply. In its basic   elements, the reply is this: the reason those  psychological structures   appealed to on a RS view count as the features in  virtue of which   agents are responsible is that those structures are  the focus of our   existing judgments of responsibility. Inasmuch as a  theory of responsibility   is properly beholden to our ordinary judgments about cases, we answer the &quot;why these structures?&quot; question by appeal to   their centrality in our responsibility assessments.  So, even if these   structures are parasitic on reasoning capacities in  some fundamental   way, it is those higher-level psychological structures  to which we   are responding in our responsibility assessments, and  it is the presence   of these specific structures (and possibly, the  absence of specific   structures or properties) that constitute one&#39;s being  a responsible   agent. On this account, the gap between those  psychological structures   and the warrant for praise and blame is bridged by our  basic epistemology of moral responsibility.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">One virtue of this reply is that it permits the RS  theorist to concede   a kind of dependence on underlying rational  capacities, without   thereby surrendering the need for a distinctively RS  account of moral   responsibility. However, in order for this strategy to  succeed, it   needs some warrant to motivate its central claim that  RS views are   uniquely good at capturing the phenomena of ordinary  judgments   of responsibility. Fortunately for the RS theorist,  there appears to be some evidence of just this sort. </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">In a recent discussion of the relevance of experimental  data   for moral theorizing, Doris  and Stich have pointed to a series   of provocative experiments conducted by Woolfolk,  Doris, and   Darley (<i>cf. </i>Doris &amp; Stich 2005; Woolfolk et al.  2006). What these   experiments seem to show is that attributions of  responsibility tend   to track an agent&#39;s identification with the action;  identification or   its absence is the most salient trigger of our  assessments of responsibility.   If that is correct, then this is exactly the sort of  evidence   the RS theorist might hope to find: evidence for a  tight conceptual link between RS-favored psychological structures and  the warrant for praise and blame. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Woolfolk <i>et al</i>. have subjects consider a scenario in  which they are told about two couples that are friends, returning  from a vacation together. One of the members of this group of four  adults, Bill, has learned that his wife (Susan) and his best friend  (Frank) have been involved in an illicit love affair with each other.  The subjects are told that Bill has just discovered proof. The subjects are  then given one of several different versions of the case. In the low  identification version of the case Bill decides that he is going to confront  Susan and Frank, but he has also resolved not to stand in their way if  they want to be together. In the high-identification version of the  case, Bill decides that he will kill Frank. The philosophically  interesting results emerge in the high identification case. Subjects in the high  identification version of the case are told that before Bill does anything,  hijackers take over the plane and things eventually get to a  situation where Bill is ordered by the hijackers to shoot Frank, and he does so. What  Woolfolk <i>et al</i>. discovered was that subjects are more  willing to judge highidentification Bill as more responsible, more appropriately blamed, and more properly subject to guilt than  low-identification Bill. Even more remarkably, this was so even in scenarios  where the hijackers were described as having additionally  administered to Bill a &quot;compliance drug&quot; that forced him to behave exactly  as they ordered. That is, even in the presence of overdetermining  elements to Bill&#39;s action, subjects were more willing to hold  high-identification Bill responsible, as compared to low-identification  Bill. So, what Woolfolk et al. seemed to have found was that  ascriptions of responsibility track identification very tightly.<a href="#9" name="s9"><sup>9</sup></a> </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">In light of results such as these, the RS theorist  might have some   reason to claim that RS theories are uniquely  well-suited to capturing   distinctive phenomena of the sort manifested in the  Woolfolk   <i>et. al</i>. results. (Indeed, one could even think  that not only do these   results favor a specifically identificationist RS  account, they even   suggest &mdash;as Frankfurt  himself famously argued&mdash; that alternative   possibilities are no requirement on moral  responsibility.<a href="#10" name="s10"><sup>10</sup></a>) So, one   might think we have an answer to the challenge facing  RS views. The   evidence for our tracking identification in  responsibility ascriptions   seems to support the idea that identification is  central to our concept and practices of moral responsibility.</font></p> <font size="2" face="verdana">     <p><b>3. Against the new argument for RS theories</b></p> </font>     <p><font size="2" face="verdana"> </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">The Woolfolk et al. results are provocative, but less  than the RS   theorist needs. First, it is far from clear that  empirical data alone   will be sufficient to demonstrate that RS accounts can  explain the   special status of those psychological features they  identify, apart   from their relationship to rational capacities. That  is, even if there   are some phenomena that RS theories are particularly  well-suited to   explain &mdash;let us suppose the Woolfolk <i>et al</i>. capture such  phenomena&mdash;,   these considerations have to be balanced against the  costs of   accepting the theory, especially given the costs and  benefits of alternative   accounts. (Here, recall the aforementioned worries  regarding   manipulation and sanity.) So, the most we can expect  from data of   this sort is support for <i>one </i>premise in a more  complicated argument for RS views. </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">There is a second, and more powerful reason to be  doubtful about   the overall utility of these examples. To put it  simply: you don&#39;t need   an RS theory to account for these results. To see why,  think about the   general issue of how we become responsible for what  flows from our   habits and character. A very natural way to  accommodate the idea   that we are responsible for actions deriving from  character and habit   is to think that our choices shape us, and that in  turn, we are shaped   by those features of our character that are built up  out of individual   choices. On this picture, as we make choices they  slowly come to   form settled habits of character.<a href="#11" name="s11"><sup>11</sup></a> Sometimes this operates  on the   basis of habituation. In other cases, it might arise  as a consequence   of settling on an explicit, self-governing policy that  filters the agent&#39;s   downstream deliberative options.<a href="#12" name="s12"><sup>12</sup></a> If I have a policy of  starting the   coffee pot immediately after getting out of bed, this  policy will typically   have the result of filtering out other deliberative  options when   I get out of bed (e.g., checking email, reading the  latest news, firing   up the waffle iron, etc.). Whether by habit or  self-governing policy   or both, prior choices can permit us to extend our  powers of agency into the future in comparatively stable and reliable ways. </font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Considerations such as these have given rise to  widespread   acceptance of what can be called a tracing theory of  moral responsibility.<a href="#13" name="s13"><sup>13</sup></a> On this picture, one way we can be responsible for  what   we do is by being responsible for who we are. This  capacity is important,   as much of what we do is a product of habits,  policies, and character traits. It is by being responsible for the  formation of these   habits, policies, and character traits that we come to  be responsible   for much of what we do. That is, we can trace our  responsibility for actions that derive from habits, policies, and  character traits back to our antecedent choices that led to those aspects of ourselves.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Tracing is an important part of the repertoire of most  theories   of responsibility. Tracing helps to explain away many  of the   cases that might otherwise appear to be accommodated  only by   an RS account. Tracing does this by permitting us to  say that for   any putative instance of responsibility,  responsibility need not be   accounted for by appeal to the presence of (for  example) rational   capacities at the time of action. Instead, all that is  needed is some   prior decision, character trait, habit, or policy that  itself constitutes   responsible choice (where this includes possession of  some suitable   knowledge), under conditions where those things were  arrived at   through the operations of the requisite agential  features. So, suppose   Kevin has the deplorable policy of insulting any  student who   comes to speak to him during office hours. And,  suppose that Kevin   is no longer reflective at all about this practice,  and not sensitive to   moral considerations that weigh against it. However,  when Kevin   formed this policy he was alive to those  considerations and simply   decided to dismiss them &mdash;perhaps even welcoming their  deterrent   effect on students visiting him during office hours.  Now, though,   when Kevin&#39;s students arrive to office hours, he  habitually says   (with a loud chuckle): &quot;What stupid question are you  too dumb to   answer on your own?&quot; On a tracing theory, the most  natural thing   to say about Kevin is that he is responsible for  insulting his student.   After all, he was carrying out a policy that he formed  freely   and responsibly (e.g., on a Reasons account, under  conditions of   rational self-governance). That his later deployment  of that policy   was unreflective and automatic is immaterial given the  presence of   that prior anchor in suitable features of agency.<a href="#14" name="s14"><sup>14</sup></a> Similarly, a drunk   driver does not get off the moral hook simply because  at the time   he hit someone with his car he was especially  intoxicated, and thus   not responsive to reasons. In such cases, we look back  to earlier decisions   to, for example, begin drinking when there was reason  to   think one might come to drive, or in adopting habits  of excessive drinking, or in deciding against being cautious about  the risks of drinking, and so on.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Once we recognize the possibility of tracing, it is  difficult to   see how examples of the sort generated by Woolfolk et  al. require   an RS view. Opponents of RS views will simply insist  that Bill&#39;s responsibility   for his killing Frank is grounded in his (free)  decision   to kill Frank, prior to the actions of the hijackers.  While Bill might   not have envisioned the particular details of how we  was going to   kill Frank, his deciding to do so is a sufficient  anchor for tracing   responsibility. As long as there is no reason to  suppose the prior decision   violated one&#39;s (non-rs) conditions of responsible  agency, then   there is no reason to rule out this sort of tracing.  That the hijackers   coerced Bill might involve some diminution of  responsibility   &mdash;which is, anyway, consistent with the responses  Woolfolk, et al. received. However, such concern does not mean that  Bill cannot be held morally responsible for pulling the trigger.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">So, a critic of RS theories is unlikely to be moved by  the Woolfolk   et. al. evidence. However, the proponent of an RS  theory will surely   object that there is a crucial element of the results  that have not yet   been addressed: where there is more identification  there is more   willingness to ascribe responsibility. Indeed, one  might think, this   is the most important result arising from those  experiments. So, the   RS proponent might say, even if critics can explain  why people might   think Bill is responsible in cases where there is a  compliance drug present, the data still supports the idea that what is  central to our ascriptions of responsibility is identification.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">However, there is a natural reply to be made to this  point as well. While it is true that the data provide something of an  initial warrant for thinking that identification is central to how we  ascribe and think about the requirements for moral responsibility,  this is also consistent with thinking that identification matters  to us only <i>evidentially</i>. That is, our tracking whether an agent identifies with  some outcome or act is a piece of evidence for some more  metaphysically or normatively salient property to which  identification points. So, for example, suppose we had the view that  responsibility depends on, roughly, (1) whether an agent is capable of  rational self-governance in that particular context and (2) whether the agent  has done something morally wrong. On this view, we ordinarily  have good reason to track whether an agent identifies with his  or her action in a given context. Whether an agent identifies with an  act counts as a good piece of evidence <i>for thinking the agent has the relevant  rational</i> <i>capacities in that context</i>. Why think that? Well,  one might think it for exactly the sort of reason suggested by Frankfurt in &quot;Freedom of the Will and the Concept of a Person&quot;:  identification <i>strongly</i> suggests &mdash;even ultimately requires&mdash; the presence of  rational selfgovernance. Where there is identification there is rational,  reflective agency. Note, moreover, that this is a perfectly  general point, one that does not necessarily require a Reasons view. For example, suppose you thought that the central agential feature that is  crucial to moral responsibility is the presence or absence of ill will.<a href="#15" name="s15"><sup>15</sup></a> On such a view, identification will plausibly be important to our  epistemology of responsibility. However, its importance is derivative. It is a  byproduct of our inability to directly access what we are really  interested in, whether it is ill will, rational capacities, or  something else. So, it seems, the Woolfolk et al. data do not settle  the matter or even obviously favor the RS theorist. Consequently, RS  theorists have not yet identified a special conceptual connection  between, on the one hand, praise and blame and on the other hand,  those psychological structures implicated by RS views.<a href="#16" name="s16"><sup>16</sup></a> Minimally, what is  required is a different set of experimental results, results  whose experimental model controls for the possibility that identification  (or some other RS property) has only an evidential role to play.  Until we see such an experiment and the attendant results, it seems that  the RS theorist cannot appeal to experimental data for forging a link  between the theory&#39;s preferred psychological structures and praise and blame.</font></p> <font size="2" face="verdana">    <p><b>4. Is the best defense a good offense?</b></p> </font>    <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Thus far, I have argued that the familiar distinction  between RS and Reasons approaches to moral responsibility is less  clear than one might think. In particular, I have argued that RS  views are under pressure to show that there is some reason to think  that the psychological features highlighted by one&#39;s preferred RS account  have a special status, apart from being evidence of the  rational faculties of agents. If they cannot show this, then it suggests  that RS theorists fail to have a distinctive approach to accounting for moral  responsibility, and more importantly, that the focus on a &quot;Real Self&quot;  constitutes a misidentification of the features of agency in  virtue of which moral responsibility obtains. I then considered a line of  reply that makes use of recent empirical data suggesting that ordinary  attributions of responsibility tightly track identification. In  reply, I noted that appeals to tracing and the evidential role of identification permit non-RS accounts to explain away the experimental  evidence. The appeal to tracing, though, is important. Without tracing, the  principal alternative to RS accounts &mdash;Reasons accounts&mdash; do not  obviously have the resources to explain away the persistence of  our responsibility attributions under conditions where agents do not seem  to be actively exercising rational capacities.</font></p>      <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">It is on this issue where RS theorists might plausibly  go on the   offensive. Although tracing is common in the  literature of responsible   agency, it has been recently argued that these  accounts are   plagued by an under-appreciated difficulty. The  difficulty is this:   in many circumstances the anchoring traits, habits, or  policies are   adopted under conditions in which the agent has poor  epistemic   access to the consequences that flow from having  adopted that trait,   habit, or policy (<i>cf. </i>Vargas 2005).<a href="#17" name="s17"><sup>17</sup></a> It is perhaps a truism  that I cannot   be held responsible for some outcome unless it was  reasonably   foreseeable &mdash;except where my lack of foresight is  itself something   for which I am responsible. In the context of tracing  theories, the   worry is this: in a wide range of cases, the aspects  of our self, character,   or policy which provide the basis for many of our  actions   were acquired in circumstances under which we could  not foresee   the implications for our future actions of our  acquiring them. Or,   to put it somewhat differently, the anchors for our  responsibility   traces cannot secure responsibility when the  downstream effect was   not reasonably foreseeable at the time of the  anchoring decision.   Indeed, the more remote &mdash;temporally or  recognitionally&mdash; the   context of action is from the context of the  acquisition of the trait,   habit, or policy, the more significant we should  expect the epistemic   defect to become. Many of the characteristics I  inculcated in myself   in junior high school were doubtlessly acquired under  conditions when I would or could not know about their  consequences in my more mature adult life.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">How ubiquitous this problem is remains an open  question. As   a problem for theories of responsibility, it depends  in part on the   frequency with which the theory relies on tracing.  Accounts that   hold that we have free will somewhat infrequently will  face a version   of this problem to a greater extent than theories that  require   little or no tracing, or whose tracing does not  typically involve significant   temporal extendedness. It is on this point, however,  that   the thin edge of the RS wedge might be inserted.  Earlier, I noted   that RS theorists could make use of tracing, but need  not. Indeed,   the ability of RS accounts to make sense of the  responsibility of   cases like Kevin (the grumpy professor) and Bill (the  homicidal   cuckold) suggest that RS accounts might yet have some  decisive advantage   over Reasons accounts. That is, RS accounts might have a particularly effective way of accounting for  responsibility attributions if it turns out that tracing is as problematic as the  above argument suggests.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">At this point, matters are too complex to permit any  sweeping   claims. What we should say partly depends on how  serious the tracing   worries turn out to be. If they are very serious, then  it seems to   open some space for the possibility that RS theories  have appropriately   identified the correct locus of concern for moral  responsibility.   By focusing on the agent&#39;s relationship to the action,  as given by the   presence or absence of a particular psychological  structure (identification,   say) it will be less of a concern whether the more  general   rational capacities that make such psychological  phenomena available   are frequently operating, engaged, or otherwise  immediately   present in decision-making. However, if one regards  manipulation   or implantation scenarios as particularly problematic  for RS accounts,   or if one were moved by the thought that RS agents can  be   unacceptably detached from what reasons there are in  the world,   then one might instead begin to take seriously the  prospect of a   distinctive form of moral responsibility skepticism.  On such a view,   one might not think that responsibility is altogether  impossible &mdash;only much less frequently present than our ordinary  practices would suggest.<a href="#18" name="s18"><sup>18</sup></a></font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Here, though, I think the Reasons theorist should  resist capitulating   too quickly to either the RS view or the attenuated  skepticism   just mentioned. One reason to think that tracing&#39;s  troubles are not   particularly dire in the present context is that,  plausibly, even habitual,   personal policy-dictated actions can be sensitive to  reasons.<a href="#19" name="s19"><sup>19</sup></a>   That I habitually empty my pockets on a bookshelf when  I get home   from work does not preclude the following: were there  something I   perceived as more important, I would respond to those  considerations. I do not wish to deny that our habits, traits, or policies can make us   less able to detect relevant considerations, moral or  otherwise. At   the same time, we do well to acknowledge that those  same mechanisms   can enhance our responsiveness to considerations. If I  had   no habit of asking my children how their day went, I  would presumably   fail to be aware of some considerations that should  weigh   in my deliberations at least some of the time. So,  while habit, traits,   and policies might sometimes diminish our appreciation  for some   reasons, they can also work to make us more aware of  these things   than we might otherwise be. All of which is to say  that we should not so readily accept that our reasoning capacity is  paralyzed, even when it is silent in action production.<a href="#20" name="s20"><sup>20</sup></a></font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">Where does all of this leave us? Answer: with more  philosophy   to do. In the literature on moral responsibility, RS  and Reasons   views are frequently treated as offering substantially  different approaches   to moral responsibility. My aim here has been to show  that   their relationship is considerably more complicated,  but in ways   that do not generally favor RS views. Moreover, the  recent appeal to experimental data by proponents of RS views is  insufficient to address these worries.</font></p>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana">None of this is to deny that Reasons accounts face  difficulties   of their own. Reasons accounts must explain how we can  have adequate   sensitivity to reasons in cases where reasons seem to  play no   active role in the production of action, but where we  nevertheless   find ourselves inclined to assign responsibility. I  have gestured at   some initial considerations why one might think that a  Reasons   account could meet this challenge, but more needs to  be said.   Whatever is the case about those speculations,  however, the difficulties   facing Reasons views are comparatively less daunting  than   those faced by RS views. In particular, it seems that  Reasons views   face difficulties with tracing more sharply than do RS  view <i>only</i>   to the degree to which RS views make themselves  susceptible to   manipulation concerns. It is very difficult to see how  worries about   manipulation cases can be addressed without appealing  to tracing   or something similar. So, RS theories are left with  both the old   and the new: familiar and difficult issues with  manipulation cases,   but also the new challenge of showing that what appeal  there is to RS views is not symptomatic of our deeper  commitment to the primacy of reasons.<a href="#21" name="s21"><sup>21</sup></a></font></p>       <p><font size="2" face="verdana"></font> </p> <font face="verdana" size="2"> </font><font face="verdana" size="2"><hr size="1"> </font>  <font size="2" face="verdana">    <font face="verdana" size="2"> </font>    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana"><a href="#s1" name="1"><sup>1</sup></a> Philosophers have given various treatments of what it  means to identify with the motives with which one acts, e.g., to be satisfied with the  motivating desires, to view those desires as expressing one&#39;s true self or true  values, and so on. Variants of this picture, broadly construed, have been suggested in the  work of, for example, Hume, Frankfurt, Watson, Dworkin and Bratman (1996).</font></p> <font face="verdana" size="2">     <p><a href="#s2" name="2"><sup>2</sup></a> I have in mind views of the sort expressed in, for  example, Wolf (1990); Wallace (1994); Fischer &amp; Ravizza (1998); Arpaly (2003); Nelkin  (2008) and, depending on some important interpretive details, it may include such accounts as  Kane (1996) and Michael McKenna (1998).</p>   </font>    <p><font size="2" face="verdana"><a href="#s3" name="3"><sup>3</sup></a> See, for example, some of the varied uses to which Frankfurt&#39;s account has been put in Taylor  (2005). See also Bratman (2003).</font></p>   <font face="verdana" size="2">     <p align="justify"><a href="#s4" name="4"><sup>4</sup></a> Compare Wolf (2003). Wolf uses the notion of &#39;sanity&#39;  in a somewhat idiosyncratic way, but the general thrust of her argument, as I understand  it, is to emphasize how those psychological structures that constitute &quot;real  selves&quot; require further supplementation by something akin to a reasons condition.</p>       <p><a href="#s5" name="5"><sup>5</sup></a> This objection was first made in Watson (1975).</p>   </font>    <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana"><a href="#s6" name="6"><sup>6</sup></a> Indeed, there is more that Frankfurt  went on to say. But in those papers that followed FWCP, the machinery of desiderative hierarchies were  re-purposed to account for other agential phenomena (identification, whole-heartedness,  and so on) and the matter of responsibility disappeared. In a conversation I had  with Frankfurt in 1999, he said that his views about the requirements for moral  responsibility had not changed since FWCP, which further suggests that the work of those  later hierarchical accounts, in which &#39;moral responsibility&#39; virtually never occurs,  are not intended as replacements of the earlier account of moral responsibility. So,  what follows here are thoughts on how a RS theorist might try to address worries about  the account as an account of responsible agency, using the resources of FWCP.</font></p>  <font face="verdana" size="2"> </font>    <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana"><a href="#s7" name="7"><sup>7</sup></a> There are other ways one might build a RS account. As  previously noted, one could appeal to the role of an agent&#39;s values, or of the  agent&#39;s valuings, as part of an account of what constitutes the agent&#39;s real self. Indeed, see  Watson (1975) for an attempt to explain how one might answer the challenge he put to Frankfurt without giving up on what I have been calling a RS picture. Alternately,  one could appeal to an agent&#39;s self-governing policies and their role in securing  cross-temporal identity of the agent. See Bratman (1996). It is beyond the scope of this  paper to address all possible ways of defending a RS account. Here, I can only flag my  suspicion that analogs of several of the already mentioned concerns can be brought to bear  against these accounts when they are construed as accounts of responsible agency.  But this is not an argument &mdash;only an acknowledgment that the most I can hope to show is how  reflections on one RS theory leads us to a better appreciation of  some complexities obscured by the familiar rs/Reasons distinction.</p></font>  <font face="verdana" size="2">     <p><a href="#s8" name="8"><sup>8</sup></a> For discussions that take RS views, under one or  another name, to be an important alternative to what I have been calling Reasons  approaches, see, for example: Wolf (1990); Fischer and Ravizza (1998); Mason (2005).</p>      <p><a href="#s9" name="9"><sup>9</sup></a> This scenario was tested precisely because of concerns  that in less coercive versions of the case, there remained alternative possibilities  that might fuel an incompatibilist reading of the evidence.</p>  </font>    <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana"><a href="#s10" name="10"><sup>10</sup></a> Doris and Stich explicitly  use these results to argue against the intuitiveness of incompatibilism, both of the alternative possibilities variety but also  of the variety that does not require alternative possibilities &mdash;what Michael  McKenna has helpfully dubbed &quot;source incompatibilism.&quot; Even if one thought that the  evidence cuts against alternative possibilities accounts, I do not see how these data  get traction against source accounts. According to source incompatibilists, the  removal of alternative possibilities does not, by itself, mean that the agent wasn&#39;t the  ultimate source of the action. It is difficult to see how one might be an ultimate source  without alternative possibilities, but this is precisely the lesson that some source  incompatibilists have tried to draw from Frankfurt-style counterexamples to the Principle  of Alternative Possibilities (see Pereboom 2005). Conceivably, a source  incompatibilist might argue that Bill was ultimately responsible (assuming he wasn&#39;t subject to  causal determinism), and that his ultimate responsibility was not gotten rid of  simply because he lacked alternative possibilities. Of course, a source incompatibilist  would need some account of what Bill&#39;s sourcehood consists in, but I do not see any  obvious reason why the case of Bill prevents source incompatibilists from offering an  account compatible with the case as it has been described. (Compare the case they rely  on with one where the hijackers give Bill a pill that deterministically makes him  identify with whatever action they give him. If Bill didn&#39;t previously identify with the  action, this sort of coercion strikes me as undermining source-hood. I wager it would also  undermine the rate at which respondents attribute moral responsibility.) Moreover,  there is no reason a source incompatibilist could not help him or herself to a tracing approach  (see next section), and thus dodge the consequences of the Woolfolk, et al., evidence in  this way.</font></p>  <font face="verdana" size="2">     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><a href="#s11" name="11"><sup>11</sup></a> Kane has proposed a picture along these lines. See Kane (1996).</p>      <p align="justify"><a href="#s12" name="12"><sup>12</sup></a> This aspect of agency plays an important role in much  of Michael Bratman&#39;s work. See, for example, many of the essays in Bratman  (2007).</p>      <p align="justify"><a href="#s13" name="13"><sup>13</sup></a> Versions of it can be found in various places, both  explicitly and implicitly. See, for example Fischer and Ravizza (1998); Kane (1996); Ekstrom  (2000); Van Inwagen (1989). Versions of a tracing principle also figure  prominently in some skeptical arguments, including those in Rosen (2004); Galen Strawson  (1994).</p> </font>     <p align="justify"><font size="2" face="verdana"><a href="#s14" name="14"><sup>14</sup></a> In contrast, without appealing to tracing, an RS view  could say: Kevin is responsible for insulting his students precisely because his doing  it is something that expresses his RS (<i>i. e.</i>, that he identifies with, that he  endorses, that expresses his regard for students, etc., etc.). Note: an RS view may appeal to tracing,  but it is not obvious that it must. Or, at any rate, if it must, it need not do so very  often. I flag this issue here because it is returns in a later section.</font></p>  <font face="verdana" size="2">     <p><a href="#s15" name="15"><sup>15</sup></a> See Strawson (1962).</p></font> <font size="2" face="verdana">    <p align="justify"><a href="#s16" name="16"><sup>16</sup></a> A further reason for caution about the evidence  invoked by Doris and Stich hinges on a complexity of responsibility attributions. In a  different set of experiments, Nichols and Knobe discovered that responsibility attributions  are sensitive to the way a case is framed. See Nichols &amp; Knobe (2007); Nichols  (2006). In concrete, high affect contexts, will ascribe responsibility even if they are told it  happens in a deterministic scenario. However, when a case is discussed  abstractly, in low affect terms, responsibility attributions become much more sensitive to disruption because of  determinism (i. e., in high affect contexts, responsibility  attributions are resilient in a way they do not tend to be in lower affect contexts.) And, in the  Woolfolk et al. experiments, the cases are described in concrete, high affect ways. So,  there seems to be a further variable here that needs to be disentangled from their results.</p></font>  <font face="verdana" size="2">     <p><a href="#s17" name="17"><sup>17</sup></a> For a recent reply to these worries, however, see Fischer &amp;  Tognazinni (2009).</p>      <p align="justify"><a href="#s18" name="18"><sup>18</sup></a> To be sure, there are other, independent reasons for  worries about the viability of Reasons views (and, correspondingly, RS views if they  indeed collapse into Reasons views) in the face of growing experimental data about  the production of human action. See, for example, the worries raised about Reasons  views in Nelkin (2005); Sie &amp; Wouters (2008); Knobe &amp; Leiter (2007).  Elsewhere, I have attempted to address at least some of these worries.</p>      <p align="justify"><a href="#s19" name="19"><sup>19</sup></a> Again, I am bracketing compatibilist and  incompatibilist disputes about whether one can have unexercised capacities if determinism is  true, at least for the purpose of assessing those agential powers central to moral responsiblity.  If compatibilism is true, then we will presumably have some way of making sense  of what I am saying here, by appealing to something like a counterfactual or  dispositional analysis of the capacity. If incompatibilism is true, then we can suppose that  what I am claiming is that in cases of habit I retain the relevant libertarian power  of rational action-initiation. The latter position would, however, require saying more  about skeptical pressures.</p>      <p align="justify"><a href="#s20" name="20"><sup>20</sup></a> Tracing might prove to be a more systematic problem  for this sort of account if one thought that responsible agency was historical in some  deep and systematic sense. Fischer and Ravizza&#39;s account of  reasons-responsiveness has this feature. They argue that irrespective of what one&#39;s reasons-responsive  capacities might be, there will always be some historical condition that must be satisfied  for one to be a responsible agent. On accounts such as these the historical  ownership condition will introduce an element that, at least in principle, seems susceptible  to the difficulties that may arise for tracing. But whether and how there is some  requirement of history on responsible agency is a complicated matter. For an overview of the  relevant literature, see Mele (forthcoming).</p>  </font>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font size="2" face="verdana"><a href="#s21" name="21"><sup>21</sup></a> Thanks to Daniel Speak for helpful comments on this  paper. Thanks also to the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard, where I worked on  this paper.</font></p> <font face="verdana" size="2"> </font><font face="verdana" size="2"> </font><font face="verdana" size="2"><hr size="1">     </font>    <p><font size="2" face="verdana"><b>Works cited</b></font></p>  <font size="2" face="verdana">     <!-- ref --><p>Arpaly, N. <i>Unprincipled Virtue</i>. New   York: Oxford,  2003.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000075&pid=S0120-0062200900030000500001&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p><font size="2" face="verdana">Bratman, M. 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