The varying rationality of weakness of the will: an empirical investigation and its challenges for a unified theory of rationality.

Michael Messerli, Julian Fink, Kevin Reuter
Author Information
  1. Michael Messerli: Department of Philosophy, University of Zurich, Zollikerstrasse 117, 8008 Zurich, Switzerland. ORCID
  2. Julian Fink: Department of Philosophy, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany.
  3. Kevin Reuter: Department of Philosophy, University of Zurich, Zürichbergstrasse 43, 8044 Zurich, Switzerland.

Abstract

Weakness of the will remains a perplexing issue. Though philosophers have made substantial progress in homing in on what counts as a weak will, there is little agreement on whether weakness of the will is irrational, and if so, why. In this paper, we take an empirical approach towards the rationality of weakness of the will. After introducing the philosophical debate, we present the results of an empirical study that reveals that people take a "dual sensitivity", as we shall put it, towards assessing the rationality of weak-willed behavior. Put succinctly, intending against your value judgements is assessed irrational; yet, in the same situation, intending is assessed significantly less irrational if you judge as something you ought to do. After discussing this result, we turn to the question of whether there is a plausible theory of rationality than can account for the dual sensitivity of the rationality assessments. We show that a success-based account can make sense of the dual sensitivity our empirical results reveal.

Keywords

References

  1. Cognition. 2004 Jul;92(3):B1-B12 [PMID: 15019555]
  2. Stud Fam Plann. 1991 May-Jun;22(3):188-97 [PMID: 1949101]
  3. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2015 Mar 12;15:19 [PMID: 25887890]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0rationalitywillempiricalweaknessirrationalWeaknesswhethertaketowardsresultsstudyintendingassessedtheorycanaccountdualsensitivityremainsperplexingissueThoughphilosophersmadesubstantialprogresshomingcountsweaklittleagreementpaperapproachintroducingphilosophicaldebatepresentrevealspeople"dualsensitivity"shallputassessingweak-willedbehaviorPutsuccinctlyvaluejudgementsyetsituationsignificantlylessjudgesomethingdiscussingresultturnquestionplausibleassessmentsshowsuccess-basedmakesenserevealvaryingwill:investigationchallengesunifiedIr-AkrasiaCoherence-basedEmpiricalReasons-basedSuccess-based

Similar Articles

Cited By