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(2018) Synthese 195 (3).

Doxastic desire and attitudinal monism

Douglas Campbell

pp. 1139-1161

How many attitudes must be posited at the level of reductive bedrock in order to reductively explain all the rest? Motivational Humeans hold that at least two attitudes are indispensable, belief and desire. Desire-As-Belief theorists beg to differ. They hold that the belief attitude can do the all the work the desire attitude is supposed to do, because desires are in fact nothing but beliefs of a certain kind. If this is correct it has major implications both for the philosophy of mind, with regards the problem of naturalizing the propositional attitudes, and for metaethics, with regards Michael Smith’s ‘moral problem’. This paper defends a version of Desire-As-Belief, and shows that it is immune to several major objections commonly levelled against such theories.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-016-1255-1

Full citation:

Campbell, D. (2018). Doxastic desire and attitudinal monism. Synthese 195 (3), pp. 1139-1161.

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