Choice Paralysis: A Challenge from the Indeterminacy of Intentional Content

I recently finished my master’s thesis at Georgia State University. The abstract is as follows:

Christian List argues that three requirements are “jointly necessary and sufficient” for free will: intentional agency, alternative possibilities, and causal control. In contrast, I argue that List’s accounts of intentional agency and alternative possibilities do not adequately explain how an agent has free will. Specifically, I argue that if an agent has free will, then it must also have phenomenality; because phenomenality determines the propositional contents of an agent’s intentional states. I demonstrate that List’s analysis of free will brackets phenomenality and, as such, an agent on his account may find itself in a permanent state of “choice paralysis,” a state in which it lacks the ability to choose due to the indeterminate content of its intentional states. I conclude by suggesting that philosophers must adopt methodologies derived from both the third- and first-person perspectives in order to adequately explain how an agent with free will interacts with the environment.

If the abstract caught your attention, you can find the complete thesis here.

Previous
Previous

Scatter My Bones across the Earth

Next
Next

The Philosopher’s Querencia