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Influence of social motivation over belief dynamics: A game-theoretical analysis [PDF]
This paper provides a game-theoretical description of social and motivational influence over belief dynamics of two arguing agents that hold contrasting views.
Castelfranchi, Cristiano +1 more
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Wish to die trying to live: unwise or incapacitous? The case of University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust versus 'ST'. [PDF]
Wellesley J, Wilkinson D, Moore B.
europepmc +1 more source
Un-willed Beliefs: An Essay on Voluntariness and Doxastic Voluntarism
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Doxastic Decision Theory, Voluntarism and the Primacy of Practical Reason
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Doxastic voluntarism and forced belief
Philosophical Studies, 1986Sur la possibilite d'un choix volontaire de nos croyances, et sur les relations entre ce " volontarisme doxastique " et le probleme de la justification des croyances. L'A. montre que cette forme de volontarisme est inacceptable a la fois du point de vue internaliste et du point de vue externaliste| il distingue cependant un volontarisme " attitudinal "
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The deontological conception of epistemic justification and doxastic voluntarism
Analysis, 1994According to the deontological conception of epistemic justification as endorsed by most traditional epistemologists, one is justified in holding a belief if and only if one is in the clear, or epistemically responsible, in holding the belief. William Alston criticizes this conception and any theory of epistemic justification based on this conception ...
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The Analogy Argument for Doxastic Voluntarism
Philosophical Studies, 2006An influential version of doxastic voluntarism claims that doxastic events such as belief-formations at least sometimes qualify as actions. William Alston has made a simple response to this claim by arguing on empirical grounds that in normal human agents intentions to form specific beliefs are simply powerless.
Nikolaj Nottelmann
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Negative Doxastic Voluntarism and the concept of belief
Synthese, 2016Pragmatists have argued that doxastic or epistemic norms do not apply to beliefs, but to changes of beliefs; thus not to the holding or not-holding, but to the acquisition or removal of beliefs. Doxastic voluntarism generally claims that humans (sometimes or usually) acquire beliefs in a deliberate and controlled way.
Hans Rott
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Resolving to believe: Kierkegaard's direct doxastic voluntarism
Philosophy and Phenomenological ResearchAbstractAccording to a traditional interpretation of Kierkegaard, he endorses a strong form of direct doxastic voluntarism on which we can, by brute force of will, make a “leap of faith” to believe propositions that we ourselves take to be improbable and absurd.
Z Quanbeck
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