Susan Wolf The Reason View Summary

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Hayley Rimlinger Professor Rued Philosophy of Psychology Extra Credit Thoughts on Susan Wolf’s, “The Reason View” When thinking about the topic of free will I personally think it is the ability to make decisions that we WANT to make, and not being forced to do so. Susan Wolf explores the idea of our independence by looking at three different views exploring our freedom and responsibility. The first view Wolf talks about is The Real Self View (RSV) which explores the idea that, we are ultimately free when we act on our inmost values whether they are “right” or “wrong”. The next view she explores is The Autonomy View (AV), this view states that “we are free when we act on our own” (Wolf 206). The last view Wolf talks about is The Reason View …show more content…

Wolf explains that ultimately “doing the right thing for the right reasons is precisely what we want to do” (Wolf 215), and that is why it gives us a sense of freedom, but what if this is not true. What if we don’t want to make the right decisions, what is someone is just a morally terrible person and wants to make bad decisions just because they WANT to? I think that them wanting to make the bad decisions would make them free, it might not make them free in the sense that what they are doing is morally good, but if they are making that decision for themselves then I truly believe that is their choice and that is freedom. That is ultimately where my views on freedom differ from Susan Wolf’s views. I would have to say that my views lie more in the realm of what Gary Watson speaks of, and also more within The Real Self View that Wolf talks about. I think that as long as a person is acting in accordance with what they believe they are free, even if what they believe is (in my eyes) terrible this is still truly their belief. For example, like we talked about in class, someone who is a kleptomaniac. If someone truly values the idea of stealing and they act on it then that is ultimately what they want to do, even though we don’t agree with this action this still makes the person free. Now, if someone is stealing because someone else is threatening them, or telling them to do so, then that brings up the case that they are NOT free. They would not be free in doing this because they are not stealing because they want to, they are stealing because someone else is telling them to do so. Another example could be someone doing a favor for someone else, if someone is doing a favor for someone because they want to then what they are doing would make them free, but if they are doing the favor for someone else

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