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The Strawsonian approach to responsibility tries to explain what it is to be morally responsible for one’s actions in terms of being an appropriate object of the reactive attitudes. How informative such explanations can be depends in part on whether an adequate characterization of these attitudes can be given without appeal to the concept of responsibility itself. Guilt is the most promising candidate for a Strawsonian account of the first-personal case of holding oneself morally responsible. The question is whether guilt can be captured without appeal to responsibility or any similar concept. We argue that it can. This chapter offers a theory of guilt as a motivational state involving a goal and specific action tendencies that constitute direct and urgent means of meeting that goal. Despite its greater cognitive complexity, guilt is like simpler emotions such as anger and fear in how its goals and action tendencies are discontinuous with practical reasoning. The motivational theory of guilt provides an important tool for theorizing first-personal responsibility practices in Strawsonian terms. We go on to argue that, contrary to some influential scholarship, the appropriateness to which Strawsonians appeal should be the concept of fittingness rather than fairness or desert.
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