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Produktdetails

Verlag
Wiley-Blackwell
John Wiley & Sons
Erschienen
2015
Sprache
English
Seiten
418
Infos
418 Seiten
254 mm x 203 mm
ISBN
978-1-118-60451-9

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Preface x
 
Source Acknowledgments xi
 
1 Philosophical Investigations

611-628 1
Ludwig Wittgenstein
 
Part I Action and Agency 3
 
Introduction to Part I 5
 
2 Agency 10
Donald Davidson
 
3 Shooting, Killing and Dying 21
Jonathan Bennett
 
4 The Problem of Action 26
Harry G. Frankfurt
 
5 Agents and their Actions 33
Maria Alvarez and John Hyman
 
6 Agency and Actions 48
Jennifer Hornsby
 
Part II Willing and Trying 63
 
Introduction to Part II 65
 
7 Acting, Willing, Desiring 69
H. A. Prichard
 
8 The Will 76
Gilbert Ryle
 
9 Acting and Trying to Act 83
Jennifer Hornsby
 
10 Action and Volition 91
E. J. Lowe
 
Part III Intention and Intentional Action 101
 
Introduction to Part III 103
 
11 Intention

1-9 107
G. E. M. Anscombe
 
12 Knowing What I Am Doing 113
Keith S. Donnellan
 
13 Intending 119
Donald Davidson
 
14 Two Faces of Intention 130
Michael Bratman
 
15 Acting As One Intends 145
John McDowell
 
16 Intentional Action and Side Effects in Ordinary Language 158
Joshua Knobe
 
17 The Toxin Puzzle 161
Gregory S. Kavka
 
18 The Ontology of Social Agency 164
Frederick Stoutland
 
Part IV Acting for a Reason 177
 
Introduction to Part IV 179
 
19 Actions, Reasons, and Causes 183
Donald Davidson
 
20 How to Act for a Good Reason 193
Jonathan Dancy
 
21 Acting for a Reason 206
Christine Korsgaard
 
22 Arational Actions 222
Rosalind Hursthouse
 
23 Agency, Reason, and the Good 230
Joseph Raz
 
24 Skepticism About Weakness of Will 245
Gary Watson
 
Part V The Explanation of Action 257
 
Introduction to Part V 259
 
25 Explanation in Science and in History

1-3 263
Carl G. Hempel
 
26 The Rationale of Actions 270
William Dray
 
27 Explanation in Science and in History

4-7 280
Carl G. Hempel
 
28 The Explanatory Role of Being Rational 289
Michael Smith
 
29 The Conceivability of Mechanism 303
Norman Malcolm
 
30 Action, Causality, and Teleological Explanation 315
Arthur W. Collins
 
31 Psychological vs. Biological Explanations of Behavior 333
Fred Dretske
 
Part VI Free Agency and Responsibility 341
 
Introduction to Part VI 343
 
32 Human Freedom and the Self 347
Roderick Chisholm
 
33 Alternate Possibilities and Moral Responsibility 353
Harry G. Frankfurt
 
34 Responsibility, Control, and Omissions 360
John Martin Fischer
 
35 The Impossibility of Ultimate Responsibility? 373
Galen Strawson
 
36 Moral Responsibility and the Concept of Agency 382
Helen Steward
 
37 Free Will and Science 393
Alfred R. Mele

Kurztext / Annotation

Bringing together a selection of the most influential classic and contemporary essays on the subject from the 1960s to the present day by leading scholars, The Philosophy of Action: An Anthology answers a pressing need for an anthology in which many voices contribute to offer an introductory survey of the field.

Langtext

The Philosophy of Action: An Anthology is an authoritative collection of key work by top scholars, arranged thematically and accompanied by expert introductions written by the editors. This unique collection brings together a selection of the most influential essays from the 1960s to the present day.
* An invaluable collection that brings together a selection of the most important classic and contemporary articles in philosophy of action, from the 1960's to the present day
* No other broad-ranging and detailed coverage of this kind currently exists in the field
* Each themed section opens with a synoptic introduction and includes a comprehensive further reading list to guide students
* Includes sections on action and agency, willing and trying, intention and intentional action, acting for a reason, the explanation of action, and free agency and responsibility
* Written and organised in a style that allows it to be used as a primary teaching resource in its own right

Über den AutorIn

Jonathan Dancy is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin and at the University of Reading, UK. An internationally known specialist in ethics, epistemology, and early modern philosophy, Professor Dancy is author of five books: An Introduction to Contemporary Epistemology (Blackwell, 1985), Berkeley: an Introduction (Blackwell, 1987), Moral Reasons (Blackwell, 1993), Practical Reality (2000), and Ethics Without Principles (2004).
 
Constantine Sandis is Professor in Philosophy at Oxford Brookes University. He is the author of The Things We Do and Why We Do Them (2012) and the editor or co-editor of New Essays on Action Explanation (2009), A Companion to the Philosophy of Action (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010), Hegel on Action (2010), and Human Nature (2012).