Luck's Mischief

Luck's Mischief
Author: Ishtiyaque Haji
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 377
Release: 2016-01-14
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0190493569

Something is subject to luck if it is beyond our control. In this book, Haji shows that luck detrimentally affects both moral obligation and moral responsibility. He argues that factors influencing the way we are, together with considerations that link motivation and ability to perform intentional actions, frequently preclude our being able to do otherwise. Since obligation requires that we can do otherwise, luck compromises the range of what is morally obligatory for us. This result, together with principles that conjoin responsibility and obligation, is then exploited to derive the further skeptical conclusion that behavior for which we are morally responsible is limited as well. Throughout these explorations, Haji makes extensive use of concrete cases to test the limits of how we should understand free will moral responsibility, blameworthiness, determinism, and luck itself.

Gods of Mischief

Gods of Mischief
Author: George Rowe
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2014-02-11
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1451667353

Relates the undercover work of George Rowe, who infiltrated the Vagos motorcycle gang, spending three years working to take down the gang from the inside.

Law Reports

Law Reports
Author: Great Britain. High Court of Justice. King's Bench Division
Publisher:
Total Pages: 960
Release: 1905
Genre: Law reports, digests, etc
ISBN:

The Works

The Works
Author: Jeremy Bentham
Publisher:
Total Pages: 634
Release: 1843
Genre:
ISBN:

In Mischief's Wake

In Mischief's Wake
Author: H.W. Tilman
Publisher: Vertebrate Publishing
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2017-01-26
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1909461377

'I felt like one who had first betrayed and then deserted a stricken friend; a friend with whom for the past fourteen years I had spent more time at sea than on land, and who, when not at sea, had seldom been out of my thoughts.' The first of the three voyages described in In Mischief's Wake gives H.W. 'Bill' Tilman's account of the final voyage and loss of Mischief, the Bristol Channel pilot cutter in which he had sailed over 100,000 miles to high latitudes in both Arctic and Antarctic waters. Back home, refusing to accept defeat and going against the advice of his surveyor, he takes ownership of Sea Breeze, built in 1899; 'a bit long in the tooth, but no more so, in fact a year less, than her prospective owner'. After extensive remedial work, his first attempt at departure had to be cut short when the crew 'enjoyed a view of the Isle of Wight between two of the waterline planks'. After yet more expense, Sea Breeze made landfall in Iceland before heading north toward the East Greenland coast in good shape and well stocked with supplies. A mere forty miles from the entrance to Scoresby Sound, Tilman's long-sought-after objective, 'a polite mutiny' forced him to abandon the voyage and head home. The following year, with a crew game for all challenges, a series of adventures on the west coast of Greenland gave Tilman a voyage he considered ' certainly the happiest', in a boat which was proving to be a worthy successor to his beloved Mischief.