Two Kinds of Rationality
Abstract
Gerhard Ernst tries to clarify the nature of rationality.
He does this by distinguishing two fundamentally different kinds of
rationality: rationality in the “adjustment-sense” and rationality in the
“evaluation-sense.” A person is rational in the adjustment-sense if her
mental states are well adjusted to each other, i.e. if her beliefs, emotions
and intentions fit together (in a sense Ernst explains); a person is rational
in the evaluation-sense if she has evaluative beliefs which are adequate on
the basis of her non-evaluative beliefs. Our “rational response system,”
as Ernst calls it, is concerned with keeping our mind unified by adjusting
our mental states to each other and with evaluating what we believe. On
the basis of the distinction between rationality in the adjustment-sense
and rationality in the evaluation-sense one can understand what is right
about the view that rationality consists in responding adequately to reasons
and what is right about the view that rationality consists in being
consistent (broadly understood).