This 1996 book presents an alternative theory of the will - of our
capacity for decision making. The book argues that taking a
decision to act is something we do, and do freely - as much an
action as the actions which our decisions explain - and that our
freedom of action depends on this capacity for free
decision-making. But decision-making is no ordinary action.
Decisions to act also have a special executive function, that of
ensuring the rationality of the further actions which they explain.
This executive function makes decision-making an action importantly
unlike any other, with its own distinctive rationality. Pink's
highly persuasive study uses this theory of the will to provide
accounts of freedom, action and rational choice. The author argues
that, in a tradition that runs from Hobbes to Davidson and
Frankfurt, Anglo-American philosophy has misrepresented the
common-sense psychology of our freedom and action - a psychology
which this book now presents and defends.
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