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DOI: 10.1177/174046810400100104 Robust Alternatives and ResponsibilityUniversity of Detroit Mercy, 9901 Marion, Redford, MI48329, USA Allen1rf{at}cmich.edu The Principle of Robust Alternatives (PRA) states that an agent is responsible for doing something only if he/she could have performed a robust alternative: another action having a different moral or practical value. Defenders of PRA maintain that it is not refuted by a Frankfurt case, given that its agent can be seen as having had such an alternativeprovided that we properly qualify that for which she is responsible. I argue here against two versions of this defense. First, I show that those who maintain that a Frankfurt agent is responsible forvoluntarily performing his/her action must attach moral significance to his/her luck. I proceed to discuss Carl Ginet's strategy of temporally qualifying ascriptions of responsibility, arguing that his counterexample to the principle that If an agent is responsible for doing A @ t, then he/she is responsible for doing Asimpliciter is disanalogous to a Frankfurt case.
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