The prescriptivity of conscious belief

In my dissertation I explain and defend the claim that conscious beliefs are essentially prescriptive. I argue that norms of conscious belief are explained by the fact that consciously believing p involves a commitment to the truth of p, a commitment analogous to the one involved in the act of accep...

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Main Author: Buleandra, Andrei
Other Authors: Morton, Adam (Philosophy)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1961
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-AEU.10048-19612012-03-21T22:50:08ZMorton, Adam (Philosophy)Buleandra, Andrei2011-06-14T15:44:25Z2011-06-14T15:44:25Z2011-06-14T15:44:25Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/10048/1961In my dissertation I explain and defend the claim that conscious beliefs are essentially prescriptive. I argue that norms of conscious belief are explained by the fact that consciously believing p involves a commitment to the truth of p, a commitment analogous to the one involved in the act of accepting an assertion in public linguistic practice. Having a conscious belief implies being vulnerable to certain questions and criticisms from other agents. For instance, when asked for reasons for her belief, a person should provide a justification which demonstrates her entitlement to accepting the given proposition as true. Moreover, if a certain belief logically follows from the agent’s beliefs then she should either accept it as a conclusion or revise her initial beliefs. I argue that both deliberative and non-inferential conscious beliefs can be construed as acceptances of assertions and that they carry the same normative import as public acts of accepting claims put forward by others. The intrinsic relation between conscious belief and language-use shows that conscious belief is irreducible to unconscious or lower-level belief, the type of belief which we attribute to non-human animals or small children. Rather than trying to reduce conscious belief to lower-level belief, I suggest that we should offer an account of the emergence of the linguistic practice of assertion in terms of animal belief and then explain the normative features of conscious belief by reference to the norms implicit in assertional practice. In addition, my work proposes a way of formulating the norms of conscious belief which is consistent with the fact that actual human beings do not have perfect logical abilities; that they can only dedicate a limited amount of time and cognitive resources to the task of reasoning.15773806 bytesapplication/pdfenconscious beliefnormativityassertionintentional statesrationalityThe prescriptivity of conscious beliefThesisDoctor of PhilosophyDoctoralDepartment of PhilosophyUniversity of Alberta2011-11Wilson, Rob (Philosophy)Brigandt, Ingo (Philosophy)Elio, Renee (Computing Science)Jackman, Henry (Philosophy, York University)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic conscious belief
normativity
assertion
intentional states
rationality
spellingShingle conscious belief
normativity
assertion
intentional states
rationality
Buleandra, Andrei
The prescriptivity of conscious belief
description In my dissertation I explain and defend the claim that conscious beliefs are essentially prescriptive. I argue that norms of conscious belief are explained by the fact that consciously believing p involves a commitment to the truth of p, a commitment analogous to the one involved in the act of accepting an assertion in public linguistic practice. Having a conscious belief implies being vulnerable to certain questions and criticisms from other agents. For instance, when asked for reasons for her belief, a person should provide a justification which demonstrates her entitlement to accepting the given proposition as true. Moreover, if a certain belief logically follows from the agent’s beliefs then she should either accept it as a conclusion or revise her initial beliefs. I argue that both deliberative and non-inferential conscious beliefs can be construed as acceptances of assertions and that they carry the same normative import as public acts of accepting claims put forward by others. The intrinsic relation between conscious belief and language-use shows that conscious belief is irreducible to unconscious or lower-level belief, the type of belief which we attribute to non-human animals or small children. Rather than trying to reduce conscious belief to lower-level belief, I suggest that we should offer an account of the emergence of the linguistic practice of assertion in terms of animal belief and then explain the normative features of conscious belief by reference to the norms implicit in assertional practice. In addition, my work proposes a way of formulating the norms of conscious belief which is consistent with the fact that actual human beings do not have perfect logical abilities; that they can only dedicate a limited amount of time and cognitive resources to the task of reasoning.
author2 Morton, Adam (Philosophy)
author_facet Morton, Adam (Philosophy)
Buleandra, Andrei
author Buleandra, Andrei
author_sort Buleandra, Andrei
title The prescriptivity of conscious belief
title_short The prescriptivity of conscious belief
title_full The prescriptivity of conscious belief
title_fullStr The prescriptivity of conscious belief
title_full_unstemmed The prescriptivity of conscious belief
title_sort prescriptivity of conscious belief
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1961
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