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(2009) Hume on motivation and virtue, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Why internalists about reasons should be humeans about motivation

Kent Hurtig

pp. 179-185

In "Internal and External Reasons' Bernard Williams suggests that internalism about reasons is compatible with the idea that beliefs can motivate; that is, that internalism is compatible with cognitivism about motivation. However, contrary to Williams' suggestion, I will argue that internalists about reasons are in fact committed to Humeanism about motivation; that is, that internalists about reasons cannot allow that beliefs can motivate in their own right. Since I believe that Humeanism about motivation is false, I think internalism about reasons implies something false, and that therefore internalism about reasons should be rejected. In this essay I shall say nothing about why I think Humeanism is false; rather, my aim will be to establish that internalism about reasons is compatible only with (or makes sense only on) a Humean theory of motivation. To do this, I will try to show that cognitive motivational internalism (CMI) is, at best, an unstable position.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230281158_9

Full citation:

Hurtig, K. (2009)., Why internalists about reasons should be humeans about motivation, in C. R. Pigden (ed.), Hume on motivation and virtue, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 179-185.

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