Responsibility
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In moral philosophy, the word responsibility has at least two related meanings:
- The obligation to answer for actions. Often this means answering to some specified authority.
- The recognition that in order to achieve one's purposes, one must act oneself ("take" responsibility) rather than expecting others to do something (compare initiative).
The etymology of the word ultimately relates to Latin respondere (to reply).
Generations of worry about a Christian Last Judgement have engrained a sense of "personal responsibility" into ethical decision-making. Any action seen as causing a situation can (in a hyper-critical society) become an occasion for sheeting home "responsibility" (blame).
In politics, calls for responsibility often form a pejorative means of attacking political opponents. This habit of demanding behaviour aligned to one's own desires also occurs in other arenas: one expects "responsibility" from children, spouses, colleagues and employees, meaning they should change their attitudes to suit the speaker.
Compare accountability. See also the section on moral responsibility in the article on free will.
Related topics
External links
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Moral Responsibility (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/moral-responsibility/)