This dissertation explores the phenomenology and folk theory of willpower, critically assesses existing scientific theories of willpower that seek to explain the phenomenology and folk theory, and proposes a new scientifically useful theory of willpower. Earlier theories reliant upon such mechanisms or techniques as control of attention, rulemaking and private side bets are shown to be inadequate to explain crucial features of certain behavioral performance deemed to be the exhibition of willpower. This dissertation sets out to a new theory capable of explaining these key features of willpower in terms of a new model of private side bets involving the staking of status ascriptions of strength of will upon the success of the relevant behavio...
The dominant view regards weakness of will an anomaly facing the standard theory of rationality. The...
In “Willpower with and without effort”, G. Ainslie advances our understanding of selfcontrol ...
The exercise of willpower is puzzling because it seems to require that a person both most wants to a...
In this paper the outcomes of the continuous studies of will are analyzed. The concept of “will” and...
One dominant scientific view holds that willpower is a type of muscle which can be weakened through ...
The present study develops the debate over whether self-control is a limited resource, by investigat...
Most contemporary self-control theories share two core assumptions. They assume that indulgence is t...
Self- control is essential for achievement and wellbeing. However, when used, the capacity for self-...
Objective: Lay theories about willpower—the belief that willpower is a limited versus nonlimited res...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
This article original appeared in Philosophy Compass and was also published in the 2010 Michigan Phi...
This article examines the evaluative nature of the folk concepts of weakness and strength of will an...
Some people, to varying degrees, believe that self-control becomes depleted with use. People with li...
We model self-control conflict as an agent's stochastic struggle against a visceral influence that i...
The dominant view regards weakness of will an anomaly facing the standard theory of rationality. The...
In “Willpower with and without effort”, G. Ainslie advances our understanding of selfcontrol ...
The exercise of willpower is puzzling because it seems to require that a person both most wants to a...
In this paper the outcomes of the continuous studies of will are analyzed. The concept of “will” and...
One dominant scientific view holds that willpower is a type of muscle which can be weakened through ...
The present study develops the debate over whether self-control is a limited resource, by investigat...
Most contemporary self-control theories share two core assumptions. They assume that indulgence is t...
Self- control is essential for achievement and wellbeing. However, when used, the capacity for self-...
Objective: Lay theories about willpower—the belief that willpower is a limited versus nonlimited res...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
This article original appeared in Philosophy Compass and was also published in the 2010 Michigan Phi...
This article examines the evaluative nature of the folk concepts of weakness and strength of will an...
Some people, to varying degrees, believe that self-control becomes depleted with use. People with li...
We model self-control conflict as an agent's stochastic struggle against a visceral influence that i...
The dominant view regards weakness of will an anomaly facing the standard theory of rationality. The...
In “Willpower with and without effort”, G. Ainslie advances our understanding of selfcontrol ...
The exercise of willpower is puzzling because it seems to require that a person both most wants to a...