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Full Description
This volume is a selection of Broome's recent papers on normativity, rationality, and reasoning. It covers a variety of topics such as the meanings of 'ought', 'reason', and 'reasons'; the fundamental structure of normativity and the metaphysical priority of ought over reasons; the ownership - or agent-relativity - of oughts and reasons; the distinction between rationality and normativity; the notion of rational motivation; what characterizes the human activity of reasoning, and what is the role of normativity within it; the nature of preferences and of reasoning with preferences; and others. These papers extend the work presented in his book Rationality Through Reasoning but there is little overlap between their content and the book's. They develop further some themes and arguments from the book, and answer some questions that the book left unanswered.
Contents
Introduction
Part A. Normativity
1: Reason fundamentalism and what is wrong with it.
2: Given reasons and giving reasons
3: The first normative 'reason'
4: A linguistic turn in the philosophy of normativity?
5: Williams on ought
Part B. Rationality
6: Rationality versus normativity
7: Motivation
Part C. Reasoning
8: Normativity in reasoning
9: A linking belief is not essential for reasoning
10: Reasoning with preferences?