Autonomous Agents: From Self-control to AutonomyOxford University Press, 2001 - 271 Seiten This book addresses two related topics: self-control and individual autonomy. In approaching these issues, Mele develops a conception of an ideally self-controlled person, and argues that even such a person can fall short of personal autonomy. He then examines what needs to be added to such a person to yield an autonomous agent and develops two overlapping answers: one for compatibilist believers in human autonomy and one for incompatibilists. While remaining neutral between those who hold that autonomy is compatible with determinism and those who deny this, Mele shows that belief that there are autonomous agents is better grounded than belief that there are not. |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A-ing ability accept acting freely agnostic akrasia argued argument Aristotle assessment attitude autonomous agent autonomously possessing basis behavior belief best judgment Beth brainwashing capacity causally determined chapter claim commitment compatibilism compatibilist compelled conception confirmation bias continent and incontinent decision theory decisive better judgment decisively judges deliberation deliberative demon deterministic doxastic principle emotions etiology eudaimonia example exercise self-control exercises of self-control experience of acting externalist feeling-state free action free agency freedom human ideally self-controlled person identified Imagine incontinent action intentional action internal indeterminism intrinsically Inwagen issue judges best judges it best Kane least libertarian Manson matter Mele ment mind moral responsibility motivational Nicomachean Ethics nonautonomist nonautonomous notion one's personal autonomy perspective philosophical preferences pro-attitudes proximal desire proximal intention psychological autonomy refrain relevant requires scenario second-order desire sense shed smoke strict akratic action sufficient conditions Suppose thesis things tion true utter the self-command wants