Our actions are informed by the consideration of reasons; reasons which constructivism suggests are not simply discovered, but made by us. This book examines this view, elaborating its basic idea into a fully-fledged account of practical reasons, making its theoretical commitments explicit, and defending it against well-known objections.
Our actions are informed by the consideration of reasons; reasons which constructivism suggests are not simply discovered, but made by us. This book examines this view, elaborating its basic idea into a fully-fledged account of practical reasons, making its theoretical commitments explicit, and defending it against well-known objections.
Andreas Müller studied philosophy and economics in Berlin, St Andrews, and Princeton. He received his PhD from Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin in 2014 and was a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Münster, before joining the University of Bern as an assistant professor in 2017. He is interested in questions in metaethics and normative and applied ethics, as well as the relations between them.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Introduction 1: What is constructivism? 2: Reasoning and reason judgements 3: The nature of reason judgements 4: The truth about reasons 5: Correct reasoning 6: Mind-dependence and objectivity Concluding Remarks References
Acknowledgements Introduction 1: What is constructivism? 2: Reasoning and reason judgements 3: The nature of reason judgements 4: The truth about reasons 5: Correct reasoning 6: Mind-dependence and objectivity Concluding Remarks References
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