Agency and the Foundations of Ethics

Nietzschean Constitutivism

Paul Katsafanas author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:3rd Dec '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Agency and the Foundations of Ethics cover

Paul Katsafanas explores how we might justify normative claims as diverse as 'murder is wrong' and 'agents have reason to take the means to their ends.' He offers an original account of constitutivism--the view that we can justify certain normative claims by showing that agents become committed to them simply in virtue of acting--and argues that the attractions of this view are considerable: constitutivism promises to resolve longstanding philosophical puzzles about the metaphysics, epistemology, and practical grip of normative claims. The greatest challenge for any constitutivist theory is developing a conception of action that is minimal enough to be independently plausible, but substantial enough to yield robust normative results. Katsafanas argues that the current versions of constitutivism fall short on this score. However, we can generate a successful version by employing a more nuanced theory of action. Drawing on recent empirical work on human motivation as well as a model of agency indebted to the work of Nietzsche, Agency and the Foundations of Ethics argues that every episode of action aims jointly at agential activity and power. An agent manifests agential activity if she approves of her action, and further knowledge of the motives figuring in the etiology of her action would not undermine this approval. An agent aims at power if she aims at encountering and overcoming obstacles or resistances in the course of pursuing other, more determinate ends. These structural features of agency both constitute events as actions and generate standards of assessment for action. Using these results, Katsafanas shows that we can derive substantive and sometimes surprising normative claims from facts about the nature of agency.

Agency and the Foundations of Ethics isolates an important and interesting problem in ethical philosophy and drives boldly toward its solution; its clarity and ingenuity make it a valuable contribution to normative ethical theory and to contemporary metaethics. * Jessica N. Berry, Georgia State University, Mind Association *
impressive and important... a comprehensive examination of constitutivism in ethics, including a lucid exposition and critical discussion of previous constitutivist theories, as well as a novel version of constitutivism that draws on developments in previously untapped areas... The writing is consistently clear, the argumentation reliably rigorous... The book is a valuable read not only for those interested in constitutivism, but also for anyone with a serious interest in ethical theory, philosophy of action, moral psychology, and Nietzsche studies more broadly. * Alex Silk, Notre Dame Philosophical Studies *
Katsafanas's thesis is novel and imaginative, both in itself and as a reading of Nietzsche. * David Owens, The TLS *

ISBN: 9780198748144

Dimensions: 232mm x 157mm x 16mm

Weight: 418g

280 pages