
Breaking one's dieting rule or resolution to quit smoking, procrastination, convenient lies, even the failure of entire nations to follow through with plans to cut greenhouse gas emissions or keep a pandemic in check - these phenomena have been discussed by philosophers and behavioural scientists as examples of weakness of will and delay discounting. Despite the common subject matter both fields have to date rarely worked together for mutual benefit. For the empirical literature is hardly accessible to a reader not familiar with econometric theory; and researchers in the behavioural sciences may find philosophical accounts invoking discounting models difficult to understand without inside knowledge of the debates and historical background.Nora Heinzelmann targets this lacuna by making the ideas and findings from both disciplines intelligible to outsiders. This reveals that discounting - as philosophers have conceived of it - is neither necessary nor sufficient for weakness of will, even though there is substantial overlap. Heinzelmann develops a richer descriptive account of weakness of will that is based on the empirically founded assumption that weak-willed behaviour is determined by uncertainty about whether or when a good materialises. She also explains why weakness of the will understood in this way is irrational: the agent yields to a cognitive bias that leads them to underestimate the greater good they think they ought to and can obtain. Finally, she explores practical implications for individuals and policymakers.
This book investigates the conceptual and empirical relationship between weakness of will and delay discounting to determine why individuals and institutions fail to follow through on their stated intentions. Nora Heinzelmann, a philosopher specializing in decision theory and behavioral science, bridges the gap between philosophical inquiry and empirical research. She argues that while delay discounting and weakness of will often overlap, they are not identical, and proposes a new descriptive model centered on uncertainty regarding the realization of future goods.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant interdisciplinary contribution that successfully translates complex econometric data for a philosophical audience. Readers frequently note that the text provides a clear, structured approach to reconciling disparate academic traditions in the study of human irrationality.
Page Count:
208
Publication Date:
2023-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192865951
ISBN-13:
9780192865953
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