Sunday, January 19, 2014

New Book: "Being Realistic about Reasons" by T.M. Scanlon



Being Realistic about Reasons

by T. M. Scanlon

(Oxford University Press, 2014)

144 pages




Description

T. M. Scanlon offers a qualified defense of normative cognitivism — the view that there are irreducibly normative truths about reasons for action. He responds to three familiar objections: that such truths would have troubling metaphysical implications; that we would have no way of knowing what they are; and that the role of reasons in motivating and explaining action could not be explained if accepting a conclusion about reasons for action were a kind of belief. Scanlon answers the first of these objections within a general account of ontological commitment, applying to mathematics as well as normative judgments. He argues that the method of reflective equilibrium, properly understood, provides an adequate account of how we come to know both normative truths and mathematical truths, and that the idea of a rational agent explains the link between an agent's normative beliefs and his or her actions. Whether every statement about reasons for action has a determinate truth value is a question to be answered by an overall account of reasons for action, in normative terms. Since it seems unlikely that there is such an account, the defense of normative cognitivism offered here is qualified: statements about reasons for action can have determinate truth values, but it is not clear that all of them do. Along the way, Scanlon offers an interpretation of the distinction between normative and non-normative claims, a new account of the supervenience of the normative on the non-normative, an interpretation of the idea of the relative strength of reasons, and a defense of the method of reflective equilibrium.

Contents

1. Introduction: Reasons Fundamentalism
2. Metaphysical Objections
3. Motivation and the Appeal of Expressivism
4. Epistemology and Determinateness
5. Reasons and their Strength

The book is based on Scanlon's Locke Lectures, held at Oxford University in 2009. You can hear / read the lectures here:

Lecture 1. Introduction (MP3) / (Text - PDF)
Lecture 2. Normativity and Metaphysics (MP3) / (Text - PDF)
Lecture 3. Motivation and the Appeal of Expressivism (MP3) / (Text - PDF)
Lecture 4. Epistemological Problems (MP3) / (Text - PDF)
Lecture 5. Normative Structure (MP3) / (Text - PDF)

T. M. Scanlon is the Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy, and Civil Polity at Harvard University. Among his books are "What We Owe to Each Other" (Harvard University Press, 1998) and "The Difficulty of Tolerance" (Cambridge University Press, 2003).

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