This paper aims to answer the following question: what is the normative connection between paternalism and the paternalist’s belief about the recipient’s agency? I consider the following two views. The Robust View says that paternalism is pro tanto wrong insofar as the paternalist’s belief about the recipient’s agency is always disrespectful. The Less Robust View says that whenever the paternalist’s belief about the recipient’s agency is disrespectful, paternalism is pro tanto wrong. I interpret…
Read moreThis paper aims to answer the following question: what is the normative connection between paternalism and the paternalist’s belief about the recipient’s agency? I consider the following two views. The Robust View says that paternalism is pro tanto wrong insofar as the paternalist’s belief about the recipient’s agency is always disrespectful. The Less Robust View says that whenever the paternalist’s belief about the recipient’s agency is disrespectful, paternalism is pro tanto wrong. I interpret the major motive-based theories of paternalism as endorsing the Robust view. While this view is susceptible to a devastating criticism, I argue that the Less Robust view is true. To make my case, I elucidate three ways in which the paternalist may come to hold a disrespectful belief about the recipient’s agency. I then argue that any paternalistic action which is predicated on or motivated by a disrespectful belief about the recipient’s agency is pro tanto wrong. Consequently, I suggest that motive-based theorists endorse the Less Robust view instead.