Akrasia;
Weakness of will;
Practical reason;
Moral psychology;
WILL;
WEAKNESS;
D O I:
10.1007/s11245-013-9209-4
中图分类号:
B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号:
01 ;
0101 ;
摘要:
I begin by refuting Davidson's classic account of akrasia, which turns on a purported distinction between judging p and judging p "all things considered." The upshot of this refutation is that an adequate account of akrasia must turn on a distinction between different ways in which the agent can make judgments about her practical reasons. On the account I propose, an akratic agent makes an existential judgment that there is some decisive practical reason to act in a certain way without also knowing what that reason is. An agent can do what such a reason requires only by deviating from the conditions under which her action would be a response to it. The possibility of akrasia is a consequence of our concern not only to perform actions that match what our reasons require but also to manifest reasons in conduct that they inform.