Normative Primitivism and the Possibility of Practical Thought

dc.contributor.advisorMyers, Robert
dc.contributor.authorSteadman, Samuel David
dc.date.accessioned2022-12-14T16:42:39Z
dc.date.available2022-12-14T16:42:39Z
dc.date.copyright2022-09-26
dc.date.issued2022-12-14
dc.date.updated2022-12-14T16:42:39Z
dc.degree.disciplinePhilosophy
dc.degree.levelDoctoral
dc.degree.namePhD - Doctor of Philosophy
dc.description.abstractReasons are essentially addressed to agents. Many contemporary efforts to illuminate this feature of reasons effectively reduce them to features of agents, e.g., to rationally-pruned desires, plans, or roles. Such reductive accounts neglect a second feature of reasons, namely, their capacity to transcend agential nature. They also neglect a feature of agents, namely, their orientation to normative entities as entities that transcend—and thus, that can guide and give shape to—agential nature. This dissertation offers a conception of the relation running from reasons to agents that captures both the transcendent character of reasons and the transcended character of agents. I synthesize two strains of thought about reasons. The first captures their formal dependence on agency, which is manifested in each reason’s being essentially a reason for some agent to do or think something. The second captures their substantive independence from agency, which is manifested in the fact that reasons needn’t answer to what agents are like. These two strains of thought can be united in a single conception, but only if the elaboration of the formal features of reasons isn’t taken to license the reduction of reasons to features of agents. In fact, unifying the two in a single conception requires that the relevant agential features be themselves depicted as formally dependent on features of reasons, so that the explanatory landscape for the philosophy of reasons and agents is properly represented in terms of the symmetric relations of a circle, rather than the asymmetric relations of reduction. This refusal to reduce is best framed by primitivism about reasons, i.e., the view that characterizes the idea of reason as primitive. But such a primitivism must nevertheless supply the materials for an account of the practical thought by which agents can receive reasons as addressed to them. I seek to demonstrate how an idea can be primitive while at the same time supplying those materials, and thereby explaining the possibility of practical thought.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/40780
dc.languageen
dc.rightsAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
dc.subjectPhilosophy
dc.subjectEthics
dc.subjectMetaphysics
dc.subject.keywordsReasons
dc.subject.keywordsAgency
dc.subject.keywordsNormativity
dc.subject.keywordsRationality
dc.subject.keywordsNon-reductionism
dc.subject.keywordsTriangulation
dc.titleNormative Primitivism and the Possibility of Practical Thought
dc.typeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation

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