Aristotle,Akrasia, and the Place of Desire in Moral Reasoning |
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Authors: | Byron J. Stoyles |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Philosophy, Trent University, 1600 West Bank Drive, Peterborough, K9J 7B8, ON, Canada |
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Abstract: | This paper serves both as a discussion of Henry’s (Ethical Theory Moral Practice, 5:255–270, 2002) interpretation of Aristotle on the possibility of akrasia – knowing something is wrong and doing it anyway – and an indication of the importance of desire in Aristotle’s account of moral reasoning. As I will explain, Henry’s interpretation is advantageous for the reason that it makes clear how Aristotle could have made good sense of genuine akrasia, a phenomenon that we seem to observe in the real world, while maintaining non-trivial distinctions between temperance (sôphrosunê), self-indulgence (akolasia), self-control (enkrateia) and akrasia. There are, however, some interpretive challenges that follow from Henry’s account and this paper is intended to explain and resolve those. |
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Keywords: | akrasia Aristotle desire Devin Henry practical reasoning |
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