Davidson on Explaining Intentional Action

Grazer Philosophische Studien 36 (1):33-45 (1989)
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Abstract

The empirist tradition has it that the genuine explanation of the occurrence of an event requires citing its cause and citing its real cause requires specifying a law that subsumes the explanandum-event and the explanans-event Davidson denies that the mentalistically described antecedents of intentional actions can be subsumed under strict laws, but nonetheless affirms, that beliefs and desires arc causes of actions. Some critics pointed out that this position is not a consistentone and levelled the charge of epiphenomenalism against it. It is shown that there are reasons for thinking that Davidson's position is sound.

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