J. Butler and P. Strawson on resentment
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Resentment is one of the most important morally significant phenomena. It is therefore
not surprising that it has attracted much attention from moral philosophers. This
paper explores two approaches to the philosophical conception of resentment. The first was developed in Early Modern by Joseph Butler. The second was proposed in
the mid-twentieth century by P. Strawson. Butler offered his ideas about the nature of
resentment within the framework of preaching, which, however, does not mean that
the theological context of his argumentation subordinates its philosophical content.
Butler’s theory is closely related to his ideas about human nature as something holistic:
we need resentment to balance another moral emotion, compassion. Butler also
distinguished two kinds of resentment: sudden and deliberate. Strawson, for his part,
presented his views on the nature of resentment in an academic lecture, which was
then published as an article. His reasoning concerns the relation between freedom,
moral reactions, and determinism. Strawson attempts to show that our conception
of freedom is closely tied to practices of moral responsibility, the existence of which
has nothing to do with determinism. A key point of his argument is the claim that we
should stop over-intellectualizing moral experience. If we abandon the intellectualist
illusion, we will see in the factuality of moral practices something more than mere
factuality. Everything that is necessary for morality is already there, in moral practice
itself: desert, resentment, justice, etc. If one realizes this fact, the problem of free will
is solved. I conclude this paper by comparing Butler’s and Strawson’s approaches.
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Loginov E. V. J. Butler and P. Strawson on resentment. Philosophy of the History of Philosophy, 2021, vol. 2, рр. 282–297. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu34.2021.118 (In Russian)