Philip Pettit has drawn together here a series of interconnected
essays on three subjects to which he has made notable contributions.
The first part of the book deals with the rule-following character of
thought. The second discusses the many factors to which choice is
rationally responsive - and by reference to which choice can be
explained - consistently with being under the control of thought. The
third examines the implications of this multiple sensitivity for the
normative regulation of social affairs. Thus the volume covers a large
swathe of territory, ranging from metaphysics to philosophical
psychology to the theory of rational regulation. The connections that
Pettit makes between these areas are original and illuminating. Each
part of the book develops a key theme. The first is that thought
succeeds in following rules - and overcomes Wittgenstein's
rule-following problem - so far as it is response-dependent; it is a
sort of enterprise that is accessible only to creatures like us for
whom certain responses are primitive and shared. The second is that
while human choice may be sensitive to discursive reasons, as we would
expect in a thinking subject, it can at the same time be subject to
the control - the virtual control, in the model developed here - of
rational self-interest. And the third is that the rational interest of
agents in achieving esteem in the eyes of others, and in avoiding
disesteem, exercises a virtual form of control that can explain the
emergence of norms and various other aspects of social life.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191530791
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter