June 14th
15.30h – 18.00h
Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa
Room: tba
Lecture on Harm
by Ben Bradley
Injunctions against harming others can be found everywhere. An obvious example is Mill’s “Harm Principle,” which “requires liberty… of doing as we like, subject to such consequences as may follow: without impediment from our fellow-creatures, so long as what we do does not harm them.” (Mill 1859: 265). Principles like Mill’s suggest that there is something especially important about harm, such that we have strong, perhaps overriding reasons both to avoid harming people and to prevent harm from coming to people. […] [However,] there are significant disagreements about what counts as a harm. So it is incumbent on philosophers to say what harm is (adapted from Ben Bradley “Doing Away with Harm”).
In this lecture, Ben Bradley takes us through the leading analyses of ‘harm’ – such as, among others, the views defended by Thomson, Norcross and Northcott – and discusses the main problems they face.
Free attendance
All welcome



