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DTSTAMP:20260606T045058Z
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20160802T120000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20160802T133000
SUMMARY:Nietzsche's Humean (All-Too-Humean) Theory of Motivation
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TZID:Australia/Melbourne
LOCATION:221 Burwood Hwy\, Burwood\, Australia\, 3125
DESCRIPTION:<p>I describe how Nietzsche joins Hume in defending the view that desire drives all human action and practical reasoning. This shared view of motivation gave them both an appreciation of the continuity between human and animal motivation\, and set them against long tradition of rationalist rivals including Kant and Plato. Kantians like Christine Korsgaard argue that our ability to reflectively endorse or reject options presented by desire demonstrates reason's ability to drive reasoning and action independently of desire. In <em>Daybreak</em> 109\, Nietzsche provides a simpler Humean explanation of the phenomena that obstructs the ambitions of Kantian moral theory: reflective endorsement and rejection involve reflecting on one desire from the viewpoint of another.</p>\n<p>Bio: Neil Sinhababu is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the National University of Singapore. His book about how desire explains action\, thought\, and feeling\, <em>Humean Nature</em>\, is forthcoming with Oxford University Press. His previous work on this topic has appeared in <em>Philosophical Review</em> and <em>No&ucirc\;s</em>. He has also published on philosophy of mind\, epistemology\, Nietzsche\, and romantic relationships with people in other possible worlds. He received his Ph.D from the University of Texas at Austin and his B.A. from Harvard University.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Sean Bowden:
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