| This parallels the debate about free will and determinism. If you were in the determinist camp, believing that all that one does was predetermined by prior environmental causes, could you still hold people responsible for their actions? Hobart makes a convincing argument that you can:
"Fatalism says that my morrow is determined no matter how I struggle. This is of course a superstition.
Determinism says that my morrow is determined through my struggle. There is this
significance in my mental effort, that it is deciding the event." [1] i.e., he is a "compatibilist", thinking that you can believe in free will and determinism too. If you find Hobart persuasive, time-blindness or no, it does make sense to reproach someone for being habitually unpunctual. [1] https://philarchive.org/archive/HOBFWA |
By "being" the label, one has little to no agency over it. Without agency, there is no responsibility, nor incentive to change. Without responsibility or incentive to change, there is no problem for the individual; rather the problem is everyone else.
This isn't just something that a person can do to themselves- it's something society can do to people. The phrase "bigotry of low expectations" describes a behavior of assuming that a label identifies a person, and that they have no personal agency to overcome it. The behavioral shift of everyone around that person molds the image the person has of themselves to a limited, restricted version of what they're actually capable of.