The paper defends three claims about Aristotle’s theory of uncontrolled actions (akrasia) in NE 7.3. First, I argue that the first part of NE 7.3 contains the description of the overall state of mind of the agent while she acts without control. Aristotle’s solution to the problem of uncontrolled action lies in the analogy between the uncontrolled agent and people who are drunk, mad, or asleep. This analogy is interpreted as meaning that the uncontrolled agent, while acting without control, is still in possession of her knowledge but she is unable to use it as knowledge due to the temporary disablement of her reason by appetite. Due to this disablement, the uncontrolled agent is temporarily unable to be motivated to act by her knowledge and ...
When told I was moving to Glasgow, my dentist promptly quoted the British sitcom Porridge: ‘I though...
This article reflects, from a feminist perspective, on a five-year period as Head of a School of Med...
Kant’s doctrine of the Fact of Reason is one of the most perplexing aspects of his moral philosophy....
The paper defends three claims about Aristotle’s theory of uncontrolled actions (akrasia) in NE 7.3....
Dieter Henrich ‘s “Notion of a Deduction” (1989), opened up approaches to both Deductions in terms o...
Recent work on the philosophy of modality has tended to pass over questions about iterated modalitie...
My paper aims at presenting Peter Auriol’s theory of cognition. Auriol holds that cognition is “some...
I highlight three features of P.F. Strawson’s later, neglected work on freedom and responsibility. F...
One of the striking characteristics of much ‘big picture’ penal scholarship is that it stops at the ...
Loosely put, colour constancy for example occurs when you experience a partly shadowed wall to be un...
In 319 B.C, the regent of Macedon and guardian of the kings, Antipater, died. Prior to his death, th...
Basil the Great in the fourth century AD argued that all material entities are constantly carri...
In the line of the ascetical tradition, the knowledge of God is the very aim of spiritual life. Divi...
The received view in physicalist philosophy of mind assumes that causation can only take place at th...
Whether Albert Camus’s “existentialist” thought expresses an “ethics” is a subject of disagreement a...
When told I was moving to Glasgow, my dentist promptly quoted the British sitcom Porridge: ‘I though...
This article reflects, from a feminist perspective, on a five-year period as Head of a School of Med...
Kant’s doctrine of the Fact of Reason is one of the most perplexing aspects of his moral philosophy....
The paper defends three claims about Aristotle’s theory of uncontrolled actions (akrasia) in NE 7.3....
Dieter Henrich ‘s “Notion of a Deduction” (1989), opened up approaches to both Deductions in terms o...
Recent work on the philosophy of modality has tended to pass over questions about iterated modalitie...
My paper aims at presenting Peter Auriol’s theory of cognition. Auriol holds that cognition is “some...
I highlight three features of P.F. Strawson’s later, neglected work on freedom and responsibility. F...
One of the striking characteristics of much ‘big picture’ penal scholarship is that it stops at the ...
Loosely put, colour constancy for example occurs when you experience a partly shadowed wall to be un...
In 319 B.C, the regent of Macedon and guardian of the kings, Antipater, died. Prior to his death, th...
Basil the Great in the fourth century AD argued that all material entities are constantly carri...
In the line of the ascetical tradition, the knowledge of God is the very aim of spiritual life. Divi...
The received view in physicalist philosophy of mind assumes that causation can only take place at th...
Whether Albert Camus’s “existentialist” thought expresses an “ethics” is a subject of disagreement a...
When told I was moving to Glasgow, my dentist promptly quoted the British sitcom Porridge: ‘I though...
This article reflects, from a feminist perspective, on a five-year period as Head of a School of Med...
Kant’s doctrine of the Fact of Reason is one of the most perplexing aspects of his moral philosophy....