Self-Determination
The Ethics of Action, Volume 1
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 7 November 2019
- ISBN 9780198843078
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages320 pages
- Size 230x153x16 mm
- Weight 456 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Do we have control of how we act, and does it matter to morality whether we do? Thomas Pink examines this free will problem by arguing that what matters to morality is not in fact the freedom to do otherwise, but something more primitive, a basic capacity or power to determine for ourselves what we do.
MoreLong description:
Thomas Pink offers a new approach to the problem of free will. Do we have control of how we act, so that we are free to act in more than one way, and does it matter to morality whether we do? Pink argues that what matters to morality is not in fact the freedom to do otherwise, but something more primitive - a basic capacity or power to determine for ourselves what we do. This capacity might or might not take the form of a freedom to act in more than one way, and it might or might not be compatible with causal determinism. What really matters to morality is that it is we who determine what we do. What we do must not simply be a function of powers or capacities for which we are not responsible, or a matter of mere chance. At the heart of moral responsibility is a distinctive form of power that is quite unlike ordinary causation - a power by which we determine outcomes in a way quite differently from the way ordinary causes determine outcomes. Pink examines how this power is involved in action, and how the nature of action permits the operation of such a power to determine it.
"[T]his is a very interesting book - a worthwhile read for philosophers, and maybe psychologists, working at the intersection of action theory, voluntary action, free will and ethics ... I would like to recommend Pink's book and I am looking forward to reading the second volume of Pink's project."
Table of Contents:
Introduction and summary
Action and its place in ethics
Freedom and purposiveness
Motivation and voluntariness
The non-voluntariness of the will
The voluntariness-based model of action
Freedom and scepticism: incompatibilism
Freedom and scepticism: alternatives
Moral responsibility and reduction
The practical reason-based model and its past
Intention and practical reason
The action-constitutive exercise of reason
Action and its motivation
Voluntariness and freedom of the will
Freedom and causation
Freedom as a power