This thesis is about what a normative reason is and how reasons relate to oughts. I argue that normative reasons are to be understood as relational properties of favouring or disfavouring. I then examine the question: What is the relation between reasons, so understood, and what we ought to do, believe, or feel? I argue that the relation is an explanatory one. We should explain what we ought to do in terms of reasons, and not the other way around. This view faces a number of difficulties, in particular in accounting for supererogatory acts and the distinction between an action being required and an action being recommended. The analysis that I provide explains how we can solve these problems. In providing such an analysis, this thes...
Reasons matter greatly to us in both ordinary and theoretical contexts, being connected to two funda...
Normative reasons are strange beasts.1 On the one hand, we are all intimately familiar with them. We...
The buck-passing account of values offers an explanation of the close relation of values and reasons...
Understanding reasons is essential both for understanding human behavior and for constructing a theo...
Reasons to act, reasons to require, and the two-leveltheory of moral explanationJo ̈rg Lo ̈schke1ÓSp...
The reasons first approach holds that all other normative concepts can be explained by reasons. It p...
I defend the view that a reason for someone to do something is just a reason why she ought to do it....
The chapter provides a picture, in relation to the debate on normativity, of the different analyses ...
The idea that normative statements implicitly refer to standards has been around for quite some time...
This paper explores the isomorphism between two relationships. The first is that between reasons and...
This thesis argues that what an agent has reason to do, and what an agent ought to do, are contingen...
The most important questions we ask are normative questions. And the most fundamental normative ques...
It is more or less common ground that an important aspect of the explanation of normativity relates ...
Normative thinking -- thinking about what to do, what to believe, how to feel, and so on -- is somet...
It is often assumed that the best explanation of why we should be moral must involve a substantive a...
Reasons matter greatly to us in both ordinary and theoretical contexts, being connected to two funda...
Normative reasons are strange beasts.1 On the one hand, we are all intimately familiar with them. We...
The buck-passing account of values offers an explanation of the close relation of values and reasons...
Understanding reasons is essential both for understanding human behavior and for constructing a theo...
Reasons to act, reasons to require, and the two-leveltheory of moral explanationJo ̈rg Lo ̈schke1ÓSp...
The reasons first approach holds that all other normative concepts can be explained by reasons. It p...
I defend the view that a reason for someone to do something is just a reason why she ought to do it....
The chapter provides a picture, in relation to the debate on normativity, of the different analyses ...
The idea that normative statements implicitly refer to standards has been around for quite some time...
This paper explores the isomorphism between two relationships. The first is that between reasons and...
This thesis argues that what an agent has reason to do, and what an agent ought to do, are contingen...
The most important questions we ask are normative questions. And the most fundamental normative ques...
It is more or less common ground that an important aspect of the explanation of normativity relates ...
Normative thinking -- thinking about what to do, what to believe, how to feel, and so on -- is somet...
It is often assumed that the best explanation of why we should be moral must involve a substantive a...
Reasons matter greatly to us in both ordinary and theoretical contexts, being connected to two funda...
Normative reasons are strange beasts.1 On the one hand, we are all intimately familiar with them. We...
The buck-passing account of values offers an explanation of the close relation of values and reasons...