Practical Reason, Aristotle, and Weakness of the Will

Portada
U of Minnesota Press, 1984 - 302 páginas

Practical Reason, Aristotle, and Weakness of the Will was first published in 1984. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.

One of the central problems in recent moral philosophy is the apparent tension between the "practical" or "action-guiding" side of moral judgments and their objectivity. That tension would not exist if practical reason existed (if reason played a substantial role in producing motivation) and if recognition of obligation were one of the areas in which practical reason operated. In Practical Reason, Aristotle, and the Weakness of the Will,Norman Dahl argies that, despite widespread opinion to the contrary, Aristotle held a position on practical reason that both provides an objective basis for ethics and satisfies an important criterion of adequacy—that it acknowledges genuine cases of weakness of the will. In arguing for this, Dahl distinguishes Aristotle's position from that of David Hume, who denied the existence of practical reason. An important part of his argument is an account of the role that Aristotle allowed the faculty nous to play in the acquisition of general ends. Relying both on this argument and on an examination of passages from Aristotle's ethics and psychology, Dahl argues that Aristotle recognized that a genuine conflict of motives can occur in weakness of the will. This provides him with the basis for an interpretation that finds Aristotle acknowledging genuine cases of weakness of the will.

Dahl's arguments have both a philosophical and a historical point. He argues that Aristotle's position on practical reason deserves to be taken seriously, a conclusion he reinforces by comparing that position with more recent attempts, by Kant, Nagel, and Rawls, to base ethics on practical reason.

 

Contenido

A Statement of the Problem
11
A Preliminary Contrast
23
Reason and General Ends
35
The Pervasiveness of Aristotles Views
61
Nature and the End of Action NE 1114b1625
68
The Apparent Support for the Humean Position
74
A Summary of the Argument
93
Does Aristotles Position on Practical Reason Provide
119
Aristotles General Approach to Akrasia
201
Two Final Objections
212
Concluding Remarks
219
NE 1143a35b5
227
De Anima 434a1215
237
Notes
249
Bibliography
287
General Index
295

An Argument for the Traditional Interpretation
156
An Argument for an Alternative Interpretation
188

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (1984)

Norman O. Dahl is professor emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Minnesota.

Información bibliográfica