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Action without Agency and Natural Human Action: Resolving a Double Paradox
Brian
Bruya
Brian Bruya
The Philosophical Challenge from China, 2015, p.339
The MIT Press
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Título:
Action without Agency and Natural Human Action: Resolving a Double Paradox
Autor:
Brian
Bruya
Brian Bruya
Assuntos:
Aesthetics
;
Ancient philosophy
;
Animals
;
Aristotelean ethics
;
Aristotelianism
;
Axiology
;
Behavioral sciences
;
Biological sciences
;
Biology
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Central nervous system diseases
;
Determinism
;
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;
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Human behavior
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Personality psychology
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Philosophical action theory
;
Philosophy
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Philosophy of mind
;
Primates
;
Psychology
;
Sleep disorders
;
Sleepwalking
;
Volition
;
Zoology
É parte de:
The Philosophical Challenge from China, 2015, p.339
Descrição:
Harry Frankfurt introduced an understanding of action defined in part by a notion of guidance: An explication of the nature of action must deal with two distinct problems. One is to explain the notion of guided behavior. The other is to specify when the guidance of behavior is attributable to an agent and not simply, as when a person’s pupils dilate because the light fades, to some local process going on within the agent’s body. The first problem concerns the conditions under which behavior is purposive, while the second concerns the conditions under which purposive behavior is intentional.¹ In considering
Editor:
The MIT Press
Idioma:
Inglês
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