Description
In ‘Explaining our Actions,’ Peter Carruthers provides a rigorous philosophical critique of common-sense approaches to understanding human behavior and motivation. Rather than accepting intuitive explanations at face value, Carruthers systematically challenges the folk psychological frameworks we typically employ to make sense of why people act as they do.
The author examines the assumptions underlying our everyday explanations of human conduct, revealing their limitations and inconsistencies. He explores how our intuitive theories about desires, beliefs, intentions, and rational deliberation shape our understanding of action, while questioning whether these frameworks accurately reflect the actual mechanisms driving behavior.
Through rigorous analysis, Carruthers demonstrates that common-sense theorizing about action contains significant gaps and theoretical difficulties. This work is essential for philosophers, cognitive scientists, and anyone interested in understanding the foundations of folk psychology and its implications for how we conceptualize human behavior.







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