Autonomous Agents: From Self-Control to Autonomy
This book addresses two related topics: self-control and individual autonomy. In approaching these issues, Mele develops a conception of an ideally self-controlled person, and argues that even such a person can fall short of personal autonomy. He then examines what needs to be added to such a person to yield an autonomous agent and develops two overlapping answers: one for compatibilist believers in human autonomy and one for incompatibilists. While remaining neutral between those who hold that autonomy is compatible with determinism and those who deny this, Mele shows that belief that there are autonomous agents is better grounded than belief that there are not.
1117586206
Autonomous Agents: From Self-Control to Autonomy
This book addresses two related topics: self-control and individual autonomy. In approaching these issues, Mele develops a conception of an ideally self-controlled person, and argues that even such a person can fall short of personal autonomy. He then examines what needs to be added to such a person to yield an autonomous agent and develops two overlapping answers: one for compatibilist believers in human autonomy and one for incompatibilists. While remaining neutral between those who hold that autonomy is compatible with determinism and those who deny this, Mele shows that belief that there are autonomous agents is better grounded than belief that there are not.
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Autonomous Agents: From Self-Control to Autonomy

Autonomous Agents: From Self-Control to Autonomy

by Alfred R. Mele
Autonomous Agents: From Self-Control to Autonomy

Autonomous Agents: From Self-Control to Autonomy

by Alfred R. Mele

eBook

$46.99 

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Overview

This book addresses two related topics: self-control and individual autonomy. In approaching these issues, Mele develops a conception of an ideally self-controlled person, and argues that even such a person can fall short of personal autonomy. He then examines what needs to be added to such a person to yield an autonomous agent and develops two overlapping answers: one for compatibilist believers in human autonomy and one for incompatibilists. While remaining neutral between those who hold that autonomy is compatible with determinism and those who deny this, Mele shows that belief that there are autonomous agents is better grounded than belief that there are not.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780198025474
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/03/1995
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 437 KB

Table of Contents

PART I
1. Introduction: Self-Control and Personal Autonomy
2. Better Judgement: Nature and Function
3. Exercising Self-Control: A Motivational Problem
4. Self-Control, Akrasia, and Second-Order Desires
5. Self-Control and Belief
6. Self-Control, Akrasia, and Emotion
7. The Upper Reaches of Self-Control and the Ideally Self-Controlled Person
PART II
8. Transition: From Self-Control to Autonomy
9. Psychological Autonomy and Personal History
10. Compatibilist Autonomy and Autonomous Action
11. Problems for Libertarians
12. Incompatibilist Autonomy and Autonomous Action
13. Assessing the Denial of Autonomy
References
Index

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