Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility

What is rational agency? What conceptual tools should we use when reasoning about it? What are the best methods for discovering the springs of our action and justifying our theoretical claims about it? A good starting point is to look at our common-sense, pre-analytical discourse about human action....

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Main Author: Botting, David Simon
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2007
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/170
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/etd_doctoral/article/1169/viewcontent/CDTG004287_P.pdf
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_doctoral-11692022-06-08T00:03:18Z Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility Botting, David Simon What is rational agency? What conceptual tools should we use when reasoning about it? What are the best methods for discovering the springs of our action and justifying our theoretical claims about it? A good starting point is to look at our common-sense, pre-analytical discourse about human action. There are two forms of such discourse. Firstly there is a descriptive discourse, describing what we do and explaining why we are doing it. When we are asked “Why did you do that?” we normally say “Because I wanted to and believed that by acting in this way I would achieve that result.” That is, we name a want and belief. These together constitute our reason for acting. “Why did you do that?” always expects a reason in response, and only accepts a reason as explanatory. This is why agency is rational. What, then, is a reason? A natural thought is to understand this teleologically. The reason, the goal that we want to achieve, is here thought of as somehow directing agency to the future. This is partly inspired by religious conceptions, where the human mind is considered to belong to a different world than is occupied by matter and explained by science. Agency is here the bridge between worlds of spirit and matter, an unpredictable, because voluntary, incursion into the physical world, originating outside of the causal chain of events which was at that time considered to be deterministically fixed. In modern times, our intuitions have turned away from this religiously inspired view towards a scientific view. Humanity, and human action, is a part of nature, not outside of it; the world of spirit has gone leaving only a world of matter to be studied by science and explained by scientific, causal laws. Human acts are now considered as events, effects of the reasons considered now as causes. The “why” question that asks for a reason is simply asking for a particular kind of cause, and psychological explanation relates to causal explanation as species to genus. This is the Causal Theory of Action. I will be defending this theory, and arguing for a complete homogeneity of explanation of the physical and psychological. It is this that I call Realistic Explanatory Monism. The second form of discourse is evaluative. We have practices of moralizing about human acts that we do not have for events. Do we have to deny the validity of these practices if, as physical events, acts are governed by exceptionless laws? We would not seem to have the freedom required to make these exceptions. My response to this is twofold. First of all, I claim that freedom and responsibility is incompatible with exceptionless laws, but that at least some of the laws concerning agency are not exceptionless – they are indeterministic rather than deterministic. Secondly, indeterminism is not unique to agency, but occurs naturally, for instance at the quantum level. 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/170 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/etd_doctoral/article/1169/viewcontent/CDTG004287_P.pdf Dissertations English Animo Repository Monism Philosophy Theory and Philosophy
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Monism
Philosophy
Theory and Philosophy
spellingShingle Monism
Philosophy
Theory and Philosophy
Botting, David Simon
Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility
description What is rational agency? What conceptual tools should we use when reasoning about it? What are the best methods for discovering the springs of our action and justifying our theoretical claims about it? A good starting point is to look at our common-sense, pre-analytical discourse about human action. There are two forms of such discourse. Firstly there is a descriptive discourse, describing what we do and explaining why we are doing it. When we are asked “Why did you do that?” we normally say “Because I wanted to and believed that by acting in this way I would achieve that result.” That is, we name a want and belief. These together constitute our reason for acting. “Why did you do that?” always expects a reason in response, and only accepts a reason as explanatory. This is why agency is rational. What, then, is a reason? A natural thought is to understand this teleologically. The reason, the goal that we want to achieve, is here thought of as somehow directing agency to the future. This is partly inspired by religious conceptions, where the human mind is considered to belong to a different world than is occupied by matter and explained by science. Agency is here the bridge between worlds of spirit and matter, an unpredictable, because voluntary, incursion into the physical world, originating outside of the causal chain of events which was at that time considered to be deterministically fixed. In modern times, our intuitions have turned away from this religiously inspired view towards a scientific view. Humanity, and human action, is a part of nature, not outside of it; the world of spirit has gone leaving only a world of matter to be studied by science and explained by scientific, causal laws. Human acts are now considered as events, effects of the reasons considered now as causes. The “why” question that asks for a reason is simply asking for a particular kind of cause, and psychological explanation relates to causal explanation as species to genus. This is the Causal Theory of Action. I will be defending this theory, and arguing for a complete homogeneity of explanation of the physical and psychological. It is this that I call Realistic Explanatory Monism. The second form of discourse is evaluative. We have practices of moralizing about human acts that we do not have for events. Do we have to deny the validity of these practices if, as physical events, acts are governed by exceptionless laws? We would not seem to have the freedom required to make these exceptions. My response to this is twofold. First of all, I claim that freedom and responsibility is incompatible with exceptionless laws, but that at least some of the laws concerning agency are not exceptionless – they are indeterministic rather than deterministic. Secondly, indeterminism is not unique to agency, but occurs naturally, for instance at the quantum level.
format text
author Botting, David Simon
author_facet Botting, David Simon
author_sort Botting, David Simon
title Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility
title_short Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility
title_full Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility
title_fullStr Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility
title_full_unstemmed Realistic explanatory monism: A causal theory of rational agency: A goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility
title_sort realistic explanatory monism: a causal theory of rational agency: a goldmanesque account of reasons, causes, and responsibility
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2007
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/170
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/etd_doctoral/article/1169/viewcontent/CDTG004287_P.pdf
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