•  6
    Craving the Right
    In Carla Bagnoli (ed.), Morality and the Emotions, Oxford University Press. pp. 38-61. 2011.
    This chapter argues that emotions provide normative reasons that can play a significant role in moral motivation, even granting that their weight is trivial in comparison to moral reasons. Besides affording a means of access to moral reasons and augmenting our motivation to act on them, emotions can be said to supply higher-order reasons, against postponing action on the reasons that moral judgment supplies on its own. The fact of continuing emotional discomfort gives grounds for rational critic…Read more
  •  20
    Emotions as Evaluations†
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 62 (2): 158-169. 2017.
  •  7
    Guilt as an Identificatory Mechanism†
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 74 (1): 46-59. 2017.
  •  27
    Oughts and Determinism
    Philosophical Review 87 (1): 77-83. 1978.
  •  10
    Self Expressions (review)
    Philosophical Review 107 (1): 128-130. 1998.
  • In ____Emotions and Reasons,__ Patricia Greenspan offers an evaluative theory of emotion that assigns emotion a role of its own in the justification of action. She analyzes emotions as states of object-directed affect with evaluative propositional content possibly falling short of belief and held in mind by generalized comfort or discomfort.
  • In ____Emotions and Reasons,__ Patricia Greenspan offers an evaluative theory of emotion that assigns emotion a role of its own in the justification of action. She analyzes emotions as states of object-directed affect with evaluative propositional content possibly falling short of belief and held in mind by generalized comfort or discomfort.
  • Craving the right : emotions and moral reasons
    In Carla Bagnoli (ed.), Morality and the Emotions, Oxford University Press Uk. 2015.
  • Practical reasons and moral ‘ought’
    In Russell Schafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Clarendon Press. 2007.
  •  52
    Freedom and Responsibility
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 30 109-120. 2023.
    Many authors treat freedom and responsibility as interchangeable and simply apply conclusions about responsibility to freedom. This paper argues that the two are distinct, thus allowing for a “semi-compatibilist” view, on which responsibility but not freedom (in the sense of freedom to do otherwise) is compatible with determinism. It thereby avoids the implausible features of recent compatibilist accounts of freedom without alternative possibilities—as if one could make oneself free just by acce…Read more
  • Making room for options : moral reasons, imperfect duties, and choice
    In Ellen Frankel Paul, Fred Dycus Miller & Jeffrey Paul (eds.), Moral obligation, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
  • Practical Reasons and Moral "Ought"
    Oxford Studies in Metaethics 2 172-199. 2007.
  •  93
    The Evaluative Content of Emotion
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 85 75-86. 2019.
    The content of emotion sometimes seems to be conflated with its object, but we can distinguish between content and object on the model of Fregean sense versus reference. Fear, for instance, refers to something the subject of fear is afraid of and represents that object of fear as dangerous, so that the emotion can be said to have evaluative content. Here I attempt to clarify and defend my view of emotional discomfort or other affect as what does the evaluating. Some current accounts of the unple…Read more
  •  38
    P.S. Greenspan uses the treatment of moral dilemmas as the basis for an alternative view of the structure of ethics and its relation to human psychology. In its treatment of the role of emotion in ethics the argument of the book outlines a new way of packing motivational force into moral meaning that allows for a socially based version of moral realism.
  •  144
    Practical Guilt: Moral Dilemmas, Emotions, and Social Norms
    Philosophical Review 105 (4): 550. 1996.
    This book brings together and develops Patricia Greenspan’s thoughts on moral dilemmas and the role of emotions in moral judgment. Her main focus is on metaethics and moral psychology, and she discusses moral dilemmas primarily as a concrete way of introducing these issues.
  •  92
    Emotions, reasons, and 'self-involvement'
    Philosophical Studies 38 (2). 1980.
  •  253
    Craving the Right: Emotions and Moral Reasons
    In Carla Bagnoli (ed.), Morality and the Emotions, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 39. 2015.
    I first began working on emotions as a project in philosophy of action, without particular reference to moral philosophy. My thought was that emotions have a distinctive role to play in rationality that tends to be underappreciated by philosophers. Bringing this out was meant to counter a widespread tendency to treat emotions as “blind” causes of action (for the general picture, see Greenspan 2009.) Instead, I thought that emotions could be seen as providing reasons. I took their significance as…Read more
  •  145
    Responsible Psychopaths Revisited
    The Journal of Ethics 20 (1): 265-278. 2016.
    This paper updates, modifies, and extends an account of psychopaths’ responsibility and blameworthiness that depends on behavioral control rather than moral knowledge. Philosophers mainly focus on whether psychopaths can be said to grasp moral rules as such, whereas it seems to be important to their blameworthiness that typical psychopaths are hampered by impulsivity and other barriers to exercising self-control. I begin by discussing an atypical case, for contrast, of a young man who was diagno…Read more
  •  82
    Practical Guilt: Moral Dilemmas, Emotions, and Social Norms
    Philosophical and Phenomenological Research 58 (3): 730-732. 1995.
  •  217
    Impulse and self-reflection: Frankfurtian responsibility versus free will (review)
    The Journal of Ethics 3 (4): 325-341. 1999.
    Harry Frankfurt''s early work makes an important distinction between moral responsibility and free will. Frankfurt begins by focusing on the notion of responsibility, as supplying counterexamples to the principle of alternative possibilities; he then turns to an apparently independent account of free will, in terms of his well-known hierarchy of desires. But the two notions seem to reestablish contact in Frankfurt''s later discussion of issues and cases. The present article sets up a putative Fr…Read more
  •  627
    I was led to this clarificatory job initially by some puzzlement from a philosopher's standpoint about just why free will questions should come up particularly in connection with the genome project, as opposed to the many other scientific research programs that presuppose determinism. The philosophic concept of determinism involves explanation of all events, including human action, by prior causal factors--so that whether or not human behavior has a genetic basis, it ultimately gets traced back …Read more
  •  477
    In Emotions and Reasons, Patricia Greenspan offers an evaluative theory of emotion that assigns emotion a role of its own in the justification of action. She analyzes emotions as states of object-directed affect with evaluative propositional content possibly falling short of belief and held in mind by generalized comfort or discomfort
  •  216
    Current treatments of practical rationality understand reasons as considerations counting in favor of or against some practical option, treating the positive and the negative case as symmetrical. Typically the focus is on examples of positive reasons. However, I want to shift the spotlight to negative reasons, as making a tighter or more direct link to rationality — and ultimately to morality, which is what much of the current interest in reasons is meant to clarify. Recognizing a positive/negat…Read more
  • Practical Reasons and Moral "
    In Russ Shafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics: Volume II, Clarendon Press. 2007.
  •  122
    Moral responses and moral theory: Socially-based externalist ethics (review)
    The Journal of Ethics 2 (2): 103-122. 1998.
    The paper outlines a view called social (or two-level) response-dependency as an addition to standard alternatives in metaethics that allows for a position intermediate between standard versions of internalism and externalism on the question of motivational force. Instead of taking psychological responses as either directly supplying the content of ethics (as on emotivist or sentimentalist accounts) or as irrelevant to its content (as in classical versions of Kantian or utilitarian ethics), the …Read more
  •  237
    Genes, electrotransmitters, and free will
    In David Wasserman & Robert Wachbroit (eds.), Genetics and Criminal Behavior, Cambridge University Press. 2001.
    There seems to be evidence of a genetic component in criminal behavior. It is widely agreed not to be "deterministic"--by which discussions outside philosophy seem to mean that by itself it is not sufficient to determine behavior. Environmental factors make a decisive difference--for that matter, there are nongenetic biological factors--in whether and how genetic.
  •  254
    Emotions, rationality, and mind-body
    In Robert C. Solomon (ed.), Thinking about Feeling: Contemporary Philosophers on Emotions, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 113-125. 2004.
    This paper attempts to connect recent cross-disciplinary treatments of the cognitive or rational significance of emotions with work in contemporary philosophy identifying an evaluative propositional content of emotions. An emphasis on the perspectival nature of emotional evaluations allows for a notion of emotional rationality that does not seem to be available on alternative accounts
  •  115
    Confabulating the Truth: In Defense of “Defensive” Moral Reasoning
    The Journal of Ethics 19 (2): 105-123. 2015.
    Empirically minded philosophers have raised questions about judgments and theories based on moral intuitions such as Rawls’s method of reflective equilibrium. But they work from the notion of intuitions assumed in empirical work, according to which intuitions are immediate assessments, as in psychologist Jonathan Haidt’s definition. Haidt himself regards such intuitions as an appropriate basis for moral judgment, arguing that normal agents do not reason prior to forming a judgment and afterwards…Read more