 |
| Topic: |
| Audio: |
|

Download |
|

Listen Online |
This text will be replaced
|
| Guest: |

John
Christman, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Political
Science, The Pennsylvania
State University |
| What
is it? |
Philosophers
call a person autonomous if she is responsible not just for what she
does but also for the priciples and rules that guide her. But does this
really make sense? Aren't we all just products of culture, education
and genes? Join John and Ken as they investigate the nature of autonomy.
|
Listening Notes
Autonomy: illusion or reality? Before turning to guest John
Christman, John and Ken decide that autonomy is a sort of
self-government wherein an individual lives by their own rules and
lives a free life. Christman agrees with John and Ken that
autonomy is best understood as self-government, but he is careful to
distinguish autonomy from freedom—freedom refers to action
whereas autonomy refers to the internal conditions that move someone to
act. Christman also disagrees that autonomy means making up your
own rules, if that’s true its unclear why autonomy is a value and
whether autonomy is even possible. Instead, Christman asserts
that autonomy is more like self-management than self-creation—and
self-management is the ability to effectively pursue our desires as
opposed to blindly following them.
John agrees with Christman’s definition and decides to flesh it
out with an example. Let’s say a man decides to become a
vegetarian. This autonomous decision isn’t made any less
autonomous because someone else created the idea of vegetarianism and
told him adopted the practice. Christman likes this example, it
illustrates his point that autonomy is a state of thinking over
one’s values and endorsing them. What makes a vegetarian
autonomous would not be creating the idea of vegetarianism but
reflecting on the idea of vegetarianism and deciding to become
one. Ken objects, he says this definition sounds more like
thoughtfulness than autonomy. Christman acknowledges his
definition is philosophically problematic – if autonomy is
examining one’s desires then we may run into an infinite regress
of desires. The first desire is not to eat meat, and the second
desire is not to harm animals, and the third desire is to do as
little harm in ones life as possible, and so forth ad infinitum.
Ken challenges Christman again, asking Christman about an autonomous
Satan. Should a purely evil person’s autonomy be
respected? Christman identifies two approaches to this
problem. The first, Kantian approach is to say that the
capacity to impose upon ourselves moral principles is the seat of all
moral responsibility and obligation. So if someone is satanic, or
they embrace evil principles it is unclear what sort of respect we owe
them. The second approach, which Christman calls the observer
point of view demands that when we interact with other people we
owe them some respect, respect their autonomy. If someone who
knows the difference between good and bad chooses to do bad we may
punish them but in the end we still owe them some respect, we still
grant them some autonomy.
In the final segment of the episode, John, Ken and Christman consider
the relationship between autonomy and democracy. John thinks we
need autonomous thinkers to make democratic decisions. But then
after that we reach consensus we want everyone to follow these rules,
regardless of their desires. Ken is still uninspired by this
definition of autonomy. What John and Christman call autonomy
sounds more like reflection and the simple act of weighing costs and
benefits before making a decision. Christman concludes that the
autonomous component of the democratic process is being able to
weigh these costs and benefits in the first place. The autonomous
self is produced by this ability to give reasons for our actions and
interact with other people.
- Polly Stryker the Roving Philosophical Reporter
(seek to 4:40) Polly considers one person’s autonomous
decision to leave a career in physics and become a philosopher.
- Ian Shoals the Sixty-Second Philosopher (seek
to 50:01) Ian addresses complaints that his so-called sixty-second
philosophies are almost always longer than sixty-seconds.
Additional Resources
Internet Encyclopedia References
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Books
|
|
|