“Our “real will” (in Bosanquet’s terms) or “rational will” (in Blanshard’s) is simply that which we would want, all things considered, if our reflections upon what we presently desire were pursued to their ideal limit.”
This is remarkably similar to the informal descriptions of CEV and moral “renormalization” that exist. Someone should look into the literature on Bosanquet and Blanshard’s rational will, and see if there’s anything else of use.
This is remarkably similar to the informal descriptions of CEV and moral “renormalization” that exist. Someone should look into the literature on Bosanquet and Blanshard’s rational will, and see if there’s anything else of use.
Thanks for the reference. It’s a shame that the informal description wasn’t attached to a more distinctive label. If so it would be worth adopting it for the sake of conformity.
I just ran across this in Wikipedia:
“Our “real will” (in Bosanquet’s terms) or “rational will” (in Blanshard’s) is simply that which we would want, all things considered, if our reflections upon what we presently desire were pursued to their ideal limit.”
This is remarkably similar to the informal descriptions of CEV and moral “renormalization” that exist. Someone should look into the literature on Bosanquet and Blanshard’s rational will, and see if there’s anything else of use.
Thanks for the reference. It’s a shame that the informal description wasn’t attached to a more distinctive label. If so it would be worth adopting it for the sake of conformity.
If I had a dollar for every time a philosopher talked informally about something potentially very cool...
...then you’d have a dollar for every post in the Sequences.