
Becoming Someone Is A Learning Process; And What We Learn Is The New Values Around Which, If We Succeed, Our Lives Will Come To Turn. Agents Transform Themselves In The Process Of, For Example, Becoming Parents, Embarking On Careers, Or Acquiring A Passion For Music Or Politics. How Can Such Activity Be Rational, If The Reason For Engaging In The Relevant Pursuit Is Only Available To The Person One Will Become? How Is It Psychologically Possible To Feel The Attraction Of A Form Of Concern That Is Not Yet One's Own? How Can The Work Done To Arrive At The Finish Line Be Ascribed To One Who Doesn't (really) Know What One Is Doing, Or Why One Is Doing It? In Aspiration, Agnes Callard Asserts That These Questions Belong To The Theory Of Aspiration. Aspirants Are Motivated By Proleptic Reasons, Acknowledged Defective Versions Of The Reasons They Expect To Eventually Grasp. The Psychology Of Such A Transformation Is Marked By Intrinsic Conflict Between Their Old Point Of View On Value And The One They Are Trying To Acquire. They Cannot Adjudicate This Conflict By Deliberating Or Choosing Or Deciding-rather, They Resolve It By Working To See The World In A New Way. This Work Has A Teleological Structure: By Modeling Oneself On The Person He Or She Is Trying To Be, The Aspirant Brings That Person Into Being. Because It Is Open To Us To Engage In An Activity Of Self-creation, We Are Responsible For Having Become The Kinds Of People We Are.
How can an individual rationally pursue a value or identity that they do not yet fully understand or possess? Agnes Callard, an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago, investigates the phenomenon of aspiration as a rational process of self-creation. She argues that individuals engage in 'proleptic' reasoning, where they are motivated by incomplete or defective versions of values they aim to eventually internalize, thereby bridging the gap between their current self and their future potential.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the philosophy of agency and moral psychology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires careful attention to follow the author's rigorous logical arguments.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190639490
ISBN-13:
9780190639495
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