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Blame

Blame is the act of holding a person or group responsible for a fault or harmful outcome. It can be a cognitive attribution—deciding that a particular agent caused an event—and a social practice in which others express disapproval, assign responsibility, or sanction the actor. Blame differs from mere causation or outcome; it involves judgments about intent, negligence, or moral desert and often carries emotional or normative weight. In everyday use, people may blame others for mistakes, or they may blame circumstances or luck when agency seems limited.

Psychological theories of blame include attribution theory and the tendency toward the fundamental attribution error, in

Socially, blame serves as a mechanism of norm enforcement and conflict resolution. It can promote accountability

In law and ethics, blame often maps onto culpability or responsibility, balancing intention, negligence, and consequences.

Related concepts include accountability, responsibility, guilt, and forgiveness. Blame remains a contested and context-dependent tool for

which
people
overemphasize
dispositional
factors
for
others
and
underweight
situational
factors.
Individuals
also
display
self-serving
biases,
attributing
successes
to
themselves
and
failures
to
others.
Blame
can
target
actions,
outcomes,
or
character,
and
it
can
be
diffuse
(societal
blame)
or
specific
(an
individual).
and
deterrence,
but
it
can
also
fuel
scapegoating,
resentment,
and
harm
to
relationships.
Cultural
contexts
shape
how
blame
is
expressed
and
whether
it
is
directed
publicly
or
privately,
and
how
forgiveness
or
apology
is
negotiated.
Philosophers
debate
whether
blame
is
justified
if
outcomes
were
unforeseen
or
if
moral
luck
played
a
role.
signaling
disapproval
and
shaping
behavior.