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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The things we do and why we do them

Sandis, Constantine January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
2

Dispositions, tropes and laws of nature

Lombardo, Eugenio Sergio Giovanni January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
3

How the folk make the mind : foundations for a social-cognitive approach to the intentional mind

Wilby, Michael John January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
4

Internalism for externalists

Young, Mark January 2007 (has links)
This thesis asks whether all reasons for action are 'internal', in the sense that a motivation to act as they recommend can be rationally derived from the psychology of the agent for whom they are reasons. I believe they are, and attempt to layout the best argument for preferring this view to an 'externalist' one, according to which an agent may have a reason to perform some act even when a motivation to do so cannot be rationally derived from his psychology. Along the way, I reject several alternative arguments: that external reasons cannot be sensitive to facts about particular agents; that some external reasons would be incapable of motivating the actions they are reasons for; that external reasons do not bear a sufficiently close connection to blame; that externalist theories are concerned with value, rather than reason; and that we should be sceptical about the 'practical truths' that externalists think are involved in reasons for action. The argument I eventually endorse relies on the premise that reasons for action, whatever they are, must at least sometimes be able to motivate the actions for which they are reasons, because this is what it takes to act for a reason. Internal reasons can achieve this, by appealing to an agent's rational dispositions. External reasons cannot; if they can motivate, it is in virtue of their also being internal reasons. Internalism can take both 'relativist' forms, such as Bernard Williams', and 'objectivist' forms, such as Christine Korsgaard's. I take no stance on the debate between them, but I am particularly interested in the defensibility of the relativist form. I therefore try to show how practical rationality that is controlled by your psychology can constrain your actions, and allow you to learn practical lessons from experience, in ways that unattractive instrumentalist models prohibit.
5

L'aliénation ou l'intelligence de l'autre : l'appauvrissement de l'expérience chez Walter Benjamin / Alienation or in understanding with the other : the impoverishment of experience in Walter Benjamin

Bessat, Caroline 10 December 2013 (has links)
Aux lendemains de la Première Guerre, le bouleversement est social, politique et culturel. Cela se traduit, chez Walter Benjamin, par une pensée de l'appauvrissement de l’expérience. La pensée rationnelle, elle-même, est dans l'impasse. Au regard de la situation, comment dire un monde qui disparaît et celui qui reste ? Nous sommes, avec Benjamin, en présence d'une radicalité qui ne cède rien à la désespérance. Le messianisme est rejoué, à contre-courant du capitalisme et du fascisme qui édictent un sens de l'avenir. C'est une réflexion au gué du temps, qui se tient entre le temps venu d'un changement nécessaire, politique et intellectuel, et le temps où l'on peut dire qu'un changement a eu lieu. Ainsi, à partir de l'appauvrissement de l’expérience, c'est la question des rapports entre théorie et pratique qui est reposée. Il s'agit de penser, et de penser le politique autrement, en faisant intervenir le théologique. Or, le sauvetage de l’expérience demande de retrouver l'étincelle toujours recommencée de la transmission, que nous proposons de dire : être dans l'intelligence de l'autre. / Just after the First World War, political, social and cultural disruptions are in the forefront. In this situation, Walter Benjamin is led to a reflection on the impoverishment of experience. Even rationality has reached deadlock. How to seize by words the world that has disappeared and the one that remains ? With Benjamin, one is confronted with a radicality which concedes nothing to despair. Messianism is reenacted against capitalism and fascism, which both firmly set the direction of the future. One is faced with a‛time-fording’ thought, halfway between the time of an upcoming – both political and intellectual – necessary change, and the time of a new regime of thought. Thus, from the impoverishment of experience arises anew the question of theory and practice. The stake is to think, to think politics in another way, which involves theology. The salvation of experience, nevertheless, demands to revive the ever-rekindling spark of transmission, that is : being in understanding with the other.
6

Δύο προσεγγίσεις για την έννοια της Πρόθεσης

Σκλαβούνος, Παναγιώτης 01 February 2013 (has links)
Η “καθιερωμένη θεώρηση για την πράξη”, όντας δεσμευμένη σε ένα ευρύτερο νατουραλιστικό μοντέλο, κατανοεί την πράξη ως “επιμέρους συμβάν”, το οποίο προκαλείται αιτιακά από συγκεκριμένες νοητικές καταστάσεις. Σ’ αυτό το πλαίσιο, η αιτιακή επίδραση της πρόθεσης υπάγεται στο σύνηθες χιουμιανό μοντέλο της αιτιότητας μεταξύ συμβάντων. Ωστόσο, η εν λόγω θεώρηση αποτυγχάνει ουσιωδώς να ερμηνεύσει τις πράξεις στην εξέλιξή τους, πριν δηλαδή να διαμορφωθεί το απαιτούμενο (από το χιουμιανό μοντέλο) εξατομικευμένο συμβάν. Το γεγονός αυτό έχει ευρύτερες επιπτώσεις για τον τρόπο με τον οποίο αντιλαμβάνεται η εν λόγω προσέγγιση τόσο την έννοια της πρόθεσης, όσο και κατ’ επέκταση το ρόλο του δρώντος. Στην παρούσα εργασία και με αφορμή κυρίως πρόσφατες εργασίες από τους Hornsby και Crowther, επιχειρηματολογώ σχετικά με το ότι μπορούμε να υιοθετήσουμε μια εναλλακτική προσέγγιση, τόσο για την οντολογία της πράξης, όσο και για την πρόθεση, η οποία δίνει ικανοποιητικότερες απαντήσεις στις ανωτέρω προκλήσεις. Κεντρική θέση στα πλαίσια αυτής της προσέγγισης είναι η αναγνώριση της “δραστηριότητας” ως συγκροτησιακού στοιχείου της πράξης, κατά τη διάρκεια της οποίας η αιτιακή συμβολή του δρώντος παραμένει συνεχής, σε συμφωνία με μια αριστοτελικού τύπου προσέγγιση της αιτιότητας. Όι παραδοχές αυτές οδηγούν σε μια θεώρηση της πρόθεσης ως καθοδηγητικής της πράξης καθόλη τη διάρκεια εξέλιξής της. / The “standard story of action” being committed to a broader naturalistic model, understands action as a “particular event”, which is caused by certain mental states. In this context, the causal efficacy of intention is covered by the standard humean model of causality between events. Nevertheless, the story in question substantially fails to give an account for actions as they develop, that is, before the required (by the humean model) individuated event has been formed. That fact has broader effects on the way that the approach in question understands the concept of intention, and ultimately the role of the agent. In this thesis, following mainly on recent papers by Hornsby and Crowther, I argue that we can endorse an alternate approach regarding the ontology of action, as well as intention, that gives more adequate answers to the challenges mentioned above. The main thesis in this context is to recognize “activity” as a constitutional element of action, during which the causal efficacy of the agent remains ongoing, in accordance with an aristotelian type of approach to causality. These commitments result in recognizing intention as guiding action throughout the whole of its development.

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