Litcius/Paper detail

Coherence as Competence

Maria Lasonen‐Aarnio

2021Episteme24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Being incoherent is often viewed as a paradigm kind of irrationality. Numerous authors attempt to explain the distinct-seeming failure of incoherence by positing a set of requirements of structural rationality. I argue that the notion of coherence that structural requirements are meant to capture is very slippery, and that intuitive judgments – in particular, a charge of a distinct, blatant kind of irrationality – are very imperfectly correlated with respecting the canon of structural requirements. I outline an alternative strategy for explaining our patterns of normative disapproval, one appealing to feasible dispositions to conform to substantive, non-structural norms. A wide range of paradigmatic cases of incoherence, I will argue, involve manifesting problematic dispositions, dispositions that manifest across a range of cases as blatant-seeming normative failures.

Topics & Concepts

IrrationalityNormativeRationalityEpistemologyCoherence (philosophical gambling strategy)PsychologyCompetence (human resources)Set (abstract data type)Positive economicsSociologyPhilosophySocial psychologyEconomicsComputer scienceMathematicsStatisticsProgramming languageFree Will and AgencyPhilosophical Ethics and TheoryEpistemology, Ethics, and Metaphysics