Choosing Well - Chrisoula Andreou

Choosing Well

The Good, the Bad, and the Trivial
Buch | Hardcover
200 Seiten
2023
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-758413-2 (ISBN)
72,30 inkl. MwSt
Choosing Well considers the challenges associated with effective choice over time. Andreou focuses on the role disorderly preferences play in self-defeating behavior and argues that rationality can validate certain disorderly preference structures while also protecting us from detrimental patterns of choice.
Self-defeating behavior and the damage it can cause constitute a rich and intriguing area of philosophical inquiry. Choosing Well explores the challenges associated with effective choice over time from both theoretical and practical perspectives. Andreou focuses on the challenges raised by cyclic preferences and incomplete preferences, both of which interfere with our ability to neatly order our options and thus make us susceptible to self-defeating patterns of choice which in turn create unacceptable results.

What are we to do if we find ourselves with cyclic preferences or with incomplete preferences? Do such preferences make us irrational? Andreou argues that rationality does not invariably prohibit disorderly preferences but does prompt us to proceed with caution when preferences are disorderly. Theories of rational choice often dismiss or abstract away from the sorts of disorderly preferences that Andreou focuses on, since they assume that rational agents can and should have neat preferences over their options. Instead, Andreou suggests, rationality can validate certain disorderly preference structures while also protecting us from self-defeating patterns of choice.

Chrisoula Andreou is a Professor in the Philosophy Department at the University of Utah and an Executive Editor of the Canadian Journal of Philosophy. Her current research projects lie in the areas of Practical Reasoning, Action Theory, Ethical Theory, and Applied Ethics.

Preface

Introduction

Chapter 1: Disorderly Preferences
1.1 Cyclic Preferences, the Money-Pump Argument, and the Puzzle of the Self-Torturer
1.2 Incomplete Preferences, Incommensurable Alternatives, and the Small-Improvement Argument

Chapter 2: Self-Defeating Self-Governance
2.1 Self-Governance
2.2 Self-Defeating Behavior
2.3 The Satisfied Slice
2.4 Strictly Self-Defeating Behavior
2.5 A Complication
2.6 Conclusion

Chapter 3: Instrumental Rationality Revamped
3.1 A Puzzle about the Puzzle of the Self-Torturer
3.2 The Real Puzzle of the Self-Torturer
3.3 Rational Dilemmas
3.4 The Moral Regarding Instrumental Rationality
3.5 Making Sense of the Money-Pump Argument

Chapter 4: Parity
4.1 Parity Illuminated
4.2 Objections and Replies
4.3 Insignificant and Momentous Choices
4.4 Generalizing
4.5 Parity without Rough Equality
4.6 Conclusion

Chapter 5: Incomparability
5.1 Incomparability and the Huge-Improvement Arguments
5.2 A Complication
5.3 Conclusion

Chapter 6: Betterness
6.1 "Is Better Than" Versus "Is Rationally Preferred To"
6.2 League-Based Satisficing
6.3 In Defense of Divergence
6.4 Morally Better Than
6.5 Conclusion

Chapter 7: Resolutions and Regret upon Going Astray
7.1 Planning Agency and the No-Regret Condition
7.2 What's to Regret?
7.3 No Regrets
7.4 Conclusion

Chapter 8: Regret in Continued Endorsement Cases
8.1 Regret, Monism, and Pluralism about the Good
8.2 From Buttered Bagels to "EverBetter" Wine and Ever-So-Tempting Potato Chips

Conclusion

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 212 x 147 mm
Gewicht 358 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Ethik
ISBN-10 0-19-758413-6 / 0197584136
ISBN-13 978-0-19-758413-2 / 9780197584132
Zustand Neuware
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