
A. W. Price explores the varying ways in which context is relevant to our reasoning about what to do. He investigates the role of context in our interpretation and assessment of practical inferences (especially from one intention to another), practical judgements (especially involving the term 'ought'), inferences from conditional 'ought'-judgements, and the ascription to agents of reasons for action. Practical inferences are subject not to a special logic, but to a teleology that they share with action itself. Their inherent purpose is to forward an end of action, and not to be logically valid. Practical judgements are commonly to be understood relatively to an implicit context of goals and circumstances. Apparently conflicting or imprudent 'ought's can show up as true once they are interpreted contextually, with an eye to different ends, and different aspects of a situation. This makes acceptable certain patterns of inference that would otherwise license counter-intuitive conclusions. What reasons for action are ascribable to an agent depends both on the context of action, and on the deliberative context. Facts tell in favour of actions against a background of particular circumstances, and in ways whose relevance to an ascription to an agent of a reason for action depends upon the perspective within which the ascription is made.
This work investigates how context functions as a critical variable in the interpretation and assessment of practical reasoning and moral judgment. A. W. Price, a scholar in moral philosophy, examines the intersection of teleology and logic within human decision-making. He argues that practical inferences are governed by the ends of action rather than formal logical validity, proposing that 'ought' statements must be understood relative to specific goals and situational circumstances.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of ethics and action theory recognize this text as a rigorous exploration of the contextual nature of practical deliberation. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for those with a background in analytic philosophy.
Page Count:
242
Publication Date:
2008-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191538647
ISBN-13:
9780191538643
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