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    The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy and Psychology of Luck

    Posted By: Underaglassmoon
    The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy and Psychology of Luck

    The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy and Psychology of Luck
    Routledge | English | 2019 | ISBN-10: 0815366590 | 486 pages | PDF/ePUB | 51.21/1.65 MB

    by Ian M. Church (Editor), Robert J. Hartman (Editor)

    Luck permeates our lives, and this raises a number of pressing questions: What is luck? When we attribute luck to people, circumstances, or events, what are we attributing? Do we have any obligations to mitigate the harms done to people who are less fortunate? And to what extent is deserving praise or blame affected by good or bad luck? Although acquiring a true belief by an uneducated guess involves a kind of luck that precludes knowledge, does all luck undermine knowledge? The academic literature has seen growing, interdisciplinary interest in luck, and this volume brings together and explains the most important areas of this research. It consists of 39 newly commissioned chapters, written by an internationally acclaimed team of philosophers and psychologists, for a readership of students and researchers. Its coverage is divided into six sections:

    I: The History of Luck
    II: The Nature of Luck
    III: Moral Luck
    IV: Epistemic Luck
    V: The Psychology of Luck
    VI: Future Research.

    The chapters cover a wide range of topics, from the problem of moral luck, to anti-luck epistemology, to the relationship between luck attributions and cognitive biases, to meta-questions regarding the nature of luck itself, to a range of other theoretical and empirical questions. By bringing this research together, the Handbook serves as both a touchstone for understanding the relevant issues and a first port of call for future research on luck

    About the Author
    Ian M. Church is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Hillsdale College. He is the co-author (with Peter Samuelson) of Intellectual Humility: An Introduction to the Philosophy & Science (2017).

    Robert J. Hartman is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the Lund-Gothenburg Responsibility Project at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. He is the author of In Defense of Moral Luck: Why Luck Often Affects Praiseworthiness and Blameworthiness (2017)