ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1987, investigates what distinguishes the part of human behaviour that is action (praxis) from the part that is not. The distinction was clearly drawn by Socrates, and developed by Aristotle and the medievals, but key elements of their work became obscured in modern philosophy, and were not fully recovered when, under Wittgenstein’s influence, the theory of action was revived in analytical philosophy. This study aims to recover those elements, and to analyse them in terms of a defensible semantics on Fregean lines. Among its conclusions: that actions are bodily or mental events that are causally explained by their doers’ propositional attitudes, especially by their choices or fully specific intentions; that choice cannot be reduced to desire and belief, and hence that the traditional concept of will as intellectual appetite must be revived.

chapter 1|22 pages

Rational Animals and their Actions

chapter 2|17 pages

Actions as Individual Events

chapter 3|18 pages

Orexis and Doxa

chapter 5|13 pages

Choosing and Doing

chapter 6|19 pages

Intending

chapter 7|24 pages

Rationalizing and Explaining

chapter 8|20 pages

Will and Intellect

chapter 9|17 pages

Agency

chapter 10|15 pages

Freedom of Choice