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2013 | 20 | 4 | 567 – 587

Article title

AGAINST NORMATIVE JUDGEMENT INTERNALISM

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Normative judgement internalism claims that enkrasia is an ideal of rational agency that poses a necessary link between making a normative judgement, and forming an intention to act according to that judgement. Against this view, I argue that enkrasia does not require the formation of new intentional states; instead, it requires that the agent's intentions do not contravene her normative judgements. The main argument for considering that an intention ought to follow from a normative judgement is the claim that the conclusion of practical reasoning is an intention. I will argue that this account is mistaken: practical reasoning aims at justifying certain actions or intentions, and thus its conclusion is a normative judgement. Defenders of NJI might argue, though, that intentions ought to follow from our normative judgements, because of certain requirements affecting not only practical reasoning, but rational agency. I argue that this conception of enkrasia is too demanding. Enkrasia, I suggest, is better understood as a restriction over our intentions: they ought not to enter into conflict with our judgements.

Keywords

Contributors

  • CONICET - Universidad de Buenos Aires, Puán 480, 1406 Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

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YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-22db8aa4-4054-4edb-ba15-cc394ab4d250
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