Abstract
What grounds the moral significance of the intend/foresee distinction?
To put the question another way, what reason do we have for believing that
moral absolutes apply with respect to intended effects, but not foreseeable
but unintended (bad) effects? Joseph Boyle has provided an answer that
relies on the idea that persons can find themselves in situations of “moral
impossibility”—situations in which every available option foreseeably will
give rise to bad effects. However, Robert Anderson has put Boyle’s answer
into question by arguing, in essence, as follows: the choice to do nothing
gives rise to no effects at all; one can always simply choose to do nothing; therefore, it is not the case that situations of moral impossibility obtain. In response, Boyle has argued that Anderson’s conception of the effects of the choice to do nothing is implausible and, further, that the choice to do nothing gives rise to effects just as do other choices. In this essay, I address and extend this debate.