Education and career
Arpaly received a dual bachelor's fromPhilosophical work
Arpaly has authored three books: ''Unprincipled Virtue: an Inquiry into Human Agency'' (2002), ''Merit, Meaning, and Human Bondage – an Essay on Free Will'', and ''In Praise of Desire'' (2014). Additionally, she's written a number of peer-reviewed papers dealing with topics such as ethics, moral psychology, and action theory. In ''Unprincipled Virtue: an Inquiry into Human Agency'', Arpaly sets out to develop a systematic way to determine whether an individual is blameworthy or praiseworthy. Arpaly engages with (and attempts to refute) a number of prominent philosophers who have dealt with the issue previously (including Kant and Aristotle), but focuses foremost on developing her own theory of praiseworthiness, one in which people are praiseworthy or blameworthy for their acts in a way that varies with their moral motivations, and (in the case of blameworthiness) with the amount of their moral indifference. She sums up this concept as 'Praiseworthiness as Responsiveness to Moral Reasons'. Arpaly articulates a skeptical and deflationary view of the idea of autonomy, pointing out that at least eight separate notions of the idea of autonomy can be found in modern philosophical literature, and doubting that autonomy of any sort is needed for an action to be praiseworthy. One of the most significant contributions of Arpaly's book is that it lays out the flaws present in most former philosophical debate on the subject – the use of overly simple and unnuanced models in previous discussions of praiseworthiness. One of the central claims of ''Unprincipled Virtue'' is that the assistance thatReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Arpaly, Nomy Living people American women philosophers 20th-century American philosophers 21st-century American philosophers Brown University faculty American ethicists University of Michigan staff Year of birth missing (living people) Philosophers of mind 20th-century American women academics 21st-century American women academics