The paper provides a historical-critical analysis of the belief-desire model (or desire-belief model), the standard framework for the genesis and causal explanation of human action in analytic philosophy. Formulated in the early 1960s by Donald Davidson in his influential essay Actions, Reasons, and Causes (1963) ‒ in opposition to Wittgensteinian anti-causalism ‒ it has since become the definitive reference point in action theory. This study first traces the historical origins of the model prior to Davidson; it then demonstrates that, while rooted in Humean principles, the Davidsonian version is significantly informed by contemporary decision theory and represents, at least in general terms, a restatement of Aristotle’s theory of deliberation.

Tra Hume e Aristotele: il belief-desire model nella teoria analitica dell'azione

Antonio Rainone
In corso di stampa

Abstract

The paper provides a historical-critical analysis of the belief-desire model (or desire-belief model), the standard framework for the genesis and causal explanation of human action in analytic philosophy. Formulated in the early 1960s by Donald Davidson in his influential essay Actions, Reasons, and Causes (1963) ‒ in opposition to Wittgensteinian anti-causalism ‒ it has since become the definitive reference point in action theory. This study first traces the historical origins of the model prior to Davidson; it then demonstrates that, while rooted in Humean principles, the Davidsonian version is significantly informed by contemporary decision theory and represents, at least in general terms, a restatement of Aristotle’s theory of deliberation.
In corso di stampa
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11574/255501
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