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Nov 1999
ISBN 0262100819
300 pp.
7 illus.
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Dynamics in Action
Alicia Juarrero

What is the difference between a wink and a blink? The answer is important not only to philosophers of mind, for significant moral and legal consequences rest on the distinction between voluntary and involuntary behavior. However, "action theory" -- the branch of philosophy that has traditionally articulated the boundaries between action and non-action, and between voluntary and involuntary behavior -- has been unable to account for the difference.

Alicia Juarrero argues that a mistaken, 350-year-old model of cause and explanation -- one that takes all causes to be of the push-pull, efficient cause sort, and all explanation to be prooflike -- underlies contemporary theories of action. Juarrero then proposes a new framework for conceptualizing causes based on complex adaptive systems. Thinking of causes as dynamical constraints makes bottom-up and top-down causal relations, including those involving intentional causes, suddenly tractable. A different logic for explaining actions -- as historical narrative, not inference -- follows if one adopts this novel approach to long-standing questions of action and responsibility.

Table of Contents
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 ABBREVIATIONS
 INTRODUCTION
1 How the Modern Understanding of Cause Came to Be
2 Causal Theories of Action
3 Action and the Modern Understanding of Explanation
4 Action as Lawful Regularities
5 Action and Reductive Accounts of Purposiveness
6 Information Theory and the Problem of Action
7 Some New Vocabulary: A Primer on Systems Theory
8 Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
9 Constraints as Causes: The Intersection of Information Theory and Complex Systems Dynamics
10 Dynamical Constraints as Landscapes: Meaning and Behavior as Topology
11 Embodied Meaning
12 Intentional Action: A Dynamical Account
13 Threading an Agent's Control Loop through the Environment
14 Narrative Explanation and the Dynamics of Action
15 Agency, Freedom, and Individuality
 NOTES
 REFERENCES
 INDEX
 
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