
If I were a better human being, that person's voice wouldn't sound so shrill to me. Many of us may have had such thoughts. They give voice to the worrying intuition that if we were less affected by sexism and racism, or better at keeping our tempers, our fellow humans would look and sound differently to us. In Alien Experience, Maura Tumulty argues that we should take this sense of unease seriously. It is as philosophically significant as our unease over desires or fears that we disown. Making sense of this unease requires us to re-think the relation between experiences and standing commitments; to re-consider what we mean by self-control; and to attend to empirical questions about perception, attention, and tacit cognition.In taking up these issues, Alien Experience illuminates and questions a significant assumption that underlies debates in the philosophy of mind, moral psychology, and ethics: While we may be answerable (morally, ethically, legally) for our attitudes and emotions, we are not answerable in any interesting way for our perceptions and sensations. Tumulty argues that this assumption leads to a flattened view of the ways experiences are related to agency. Recognizing that we can be alienated from our experiences helps us appreciate distinctive opportunities for self-improvement.
This book investigates whether individuals are morally or ethically answerable for their perceptions and sensations, challenging the common assumption that agency is limited to attitudes and emotions. Maura Tumulty, a philosopher, utilizes a framework that bridges moral psychology and the philosophy of mind to examine the unease we feel regarding our own reactions to others. She argues that this sense of alienation from one's own experiences is a significant site for self-improvement and requires a re-evaluation of how we define self-control and cognitive perception.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of moral philosophy recognize this work as a nuanced contribution to the discourse on agency and self-perception. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for those familiar with contemporary debates in ethics and the philosophy of mind.
Page Count:
298
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190845643
ISBN-13:
9780190845643
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