This paper presents Dual-Level Moral Anthropology (DLMA), a novel theoretical framework that reconceptualizes moral responsibility through two distinct but integrated levels of moral processing. Drawing on teleological principles, moral psychology, and event-causal libertarianism, DLMA proposes that moral agency operates through: (1) Teleological Moral Psychology - automatic moral intuitions aimed at tracking moral truth, and (2) Conscious Moral Agency - libertarian responses to these teleologic…
Read moreThis paper presents Dual-Level Moral Anthropology (DLMA), a novel theoretical framework that reconceptualizes moral responsibility through two distinct but integrated levels of moral processing. Drawing on teleological principles, moral psychology, and event-causal libertarianism, DLMA proposes that moral agency operates through: (1) Teleological Moral Psychology - automatic moral intuitions aimed at tracking moral truth, and (2) Conscious Moral Agency - libertarian responses to these teleologically-oriented intuitions. This framework aims to resolve classical problems in moral philosophy while providing new insights into moral development, responsibility attribution, and the relationship between determinism and free will.
DLMA’s core claims are grounded in six core axioms illustrating the relationship between agents and these two “Levels”. From these axioms, three key theorems follow:
(1) Inherited Properties Without Culpability: Agents can inherit corrupted teleological natures without bearing moral guilt if their conscious agency remains uncorrupted. This addresses debates about inherited moral responsibility, genetic determinism, and conditions for culpability.
(2) Rational Agency Without Biological Drives: Purely rational agents lacking appetitive drives can still engage in morally significant action through conscious agency alone. This illuminates debates in AI ethics, the mind-body problem, and the role of emotion in moral motivation.
(3) Necessary Goodness Compatible with Libertarian Freedom: Agents possessing necessary goodness can retain libertarian freedom when their conscious agency perfectly endorses their teleological orientation. This contributes to compatibilist-libertarian debates and Frankfurt-style cases.
Using this framework, DLMA can potentially resolve classical challenges in theology such as Christ's sinlessness, angelic moral agency and divine freedom. I am arguing that DLMA provides a better solution to these issues than traditional responses due to its grounding in teleological orientation integrating with free will rather than sidestepping the categories all-together.
Keywords: moral psychology, teleological ethics, libertarian free will, dual-process theory, moral responsibility, moral epistemology, moral development, event-causal libertarianism, moral intuition, moral agency