
Small acts, big harms: Workshop on individual responsibility for collectively caused outcomes
Small acts, big harms: Workshop on individual responsibility for collectively caused outcomes
1-2 June 2021
University of Helsinki (over Zoom)
The workshop brings together philosophers working on topics related to individual responsibility for collectively caused outcomes. Why should we care about what we do as individuals if the effects of our individual actions are imperceptible? Yet what we do together, in aggregate, matters a great deal. Indeed, many global ills can be conceptualised as small contributions to great harms. Examples include microplastics found in the oceans, greenhouse gases emitted around the world accumulating in the atmosphere to cause climate change, or customers of global brands becoming complicit in sweatshop labour through their purchases.
There is an ongoing debate among philosophers about the significance of small contributions. Some argue that small contributions to great harms are also harmful by themselves. Others disagree and argue that they become harms only when combined with enough other such contributions. The same goes for small contributions to beneficial outcomes. The puzzle is what is the source of individual responsibility when no one can mitigate the collectively caused harm on their own, and the effects of individual actions are perceived as harmless. While no individual is responsible for the harm or wrong in its totality, they can be responsible for things like increasing the risk of serious harm to others, participating in the creation of the harm, or failing to contribute to make things better.
The dilemma of marginal participation has also been discussed in relation to structural injustices, like the way individuals can help to maintain harmful social norms even when they do not intend to do so. In large groups, if everyone is waiting for someone else to act, diffusion of responsibility can make people complicit in harms and injustices that they are witness to. It seems that we want individuals to care about small contributions even if they cause no harm or benefit by themselves. This also raises questions around moral psychology and how we make moral decisions in collective settings.
The times below are in Finnish time (EEST), please see https://tinyurl.com/4n99jwcn for conversions to other time zones.
Tuesday 1 June 2021
16:00 Welcome
16:05 Keynote: John Broome (University of Oxford)
How much harm does each of us do?
17:30 Break
17:50 Barry Maguire (University of Edinburgh)
Rewiring Ethics
18:30 Seunghyun Song (KU Leuven)
To know, in order to change: Structural-epistemic responsibility to know how one’s small actions lead to big harms
19:10 Säde Hormio (University of Helsinki)
Responsibility for Social Norms
19:50 Break
20:10 Thomas Christiano (University of Arizona) and Sameer Bajaj (University of Warwick)
The Egalitarian Theory of the Duty to Vote
20:50 Johannes Himmelreich (Syracuse University)
Citizen Responsibility as Associative Responsibility
21:30 Saba Bazargan-Forward (UC San Diego)
Cooperation and Authority-Based Accountability
Wednesday 2 June 2021
16:00 Welcome
16:05 Keynote: Christopher Kutz (UC Berkeley)
Comparative Moral Psychology and Climate Change Responsibility
17:30 Break
17:50 Chad Lee-Stronach (Northeastern University) and Rory Smead (Northeastern University)
Interdependent Conventions and the Possibility of Systemic Change
18:30 Francisca Wals (University of Groningen)
Can Users Be Blamed for Platform-Mediated Problems?
19:10 Jan Willem Wieland (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Kantian analysis of collective harms
19:50 Break
20:10 Andrea Asker Svedberg (Stockholm University)
The Problem of Collective Impact –An Assessment of Julia Nefsky’s General Solution
20:50 Keynote: Julia Nefsky (University of Toronto)
Agential Inevitability
To receive updates about the workshop and instructions to how to sign up for the Zoom event nearer the time, please join the workshop’s email list at: https://elomake.helsinki.fi/lomakkeet/110289/lomake.html
The workshop is organized by Säde Hormio (University of Helsinki) as part of the “Complicity: Individual Responsibility in Collective Contexts” -project, which has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No GAP-839448.