A Unified Account
Buch, Englisch, 75 Seiten
Reihe: Elements in Epistemology
ISBN: 978-1-009-50977-0
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
Received theories of self-deception are problematic. The traditional view, according to which self-deceivers intend to deceive themselves, generates paradoxes: you cannot deceive yourself intentionally because you know your own plans and intentions. Non-traditional views argue that self-deceivers act intentionally but deceive themselves unintentionally or that self-deception is not intentional at all. The non-traditional approaches do not generate paradoxes, but they entail that people can deceive themselves by accident or by mistake, which is controversial. The author argues that a functional analysis of deception solves these problems. On the functional view, a certain thing is deceptive if and only if its function is to mislead; hence, while (self-)deception may but need not be intended, it is never accidental or a mistake. Also, self-deceivers need not benefit from deception and they need not end up with epistemically unjustified beliefs; rather, they must 'not be themselves'. Finally, self-deception need not be adaptive.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction; 2. Human Deception; 3. A functional analysis of Self-Deception; 4. The Not-So-Beneficial result of Self-Deception; 5. Concluding remarks; References.