Derived from
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20710708 PHYLOSOPHY OF ACTION in Communication Studies L-20 PIAZZA MARCO
(syllabus)
Title: Free Will, Intentionality, and Habits of Action. The course aims to provide conceptual and historical tools around the philosophy of action, privileging the analysis of the relationship between free will, determinism, intentionality, daily life and habits of action. The first module is aimed at providing a synthetic framework of theories on free will and intentionality in correlation with contemporary debate. The second module will focus on the specificity of the habitual actions, on which only recently philosophy, also of analytical area, has resumed to deal, in a close dialogue with psychology, sociology and neuroscience. For this purpose, some doctrines will be examined that provide key elements for reflection on the relationship between action, freedom and habits, including Aristotelian and Pragmatist.
(reference books)
For Erasmus Students: D.U. 1: M. De Caro, Free Will and Free Rides. ACTA PHILOSOPHICA, 2018, pp. 15-25. D.M. Wegner, Précis of the illusion of conscious will. Behav Brain Sci. 2004 Oct;27(5):pp. 649-59.
D.U. 2: B. Pollard, “Habitual Actions”, in T. O’Connor, C. Sandis (ed. by), A Companion to the Philosophy of Action, Oxford, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010, pp. 74-81 B. Pollard, “Identification, Psychology, and Habits”, in New Waves in Philosophy of Action, edited by J. Aguilar, A. Buckareff and K. Frankish, 8 New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011, pp. 81–97 A. Noë, Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not Your Brain, and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness. Hill and Wang, 2010 (limited to chap. V).
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