Christian Wolff über motivierende Gründe und handlungsrelevante Irrtümer
In: Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, Band 104, Heft 1, S. 131-163
ISSN: 1613-0650
Abstract
In this paper, I discuss Christian Wolff's conception of motivating and normative reasons. My aim is to show that in the discussion of error cases, Wolff pursues a strategy that is strikingly similar to the strategy of contemporary defenders of nicht-psychologist accounts of motivating reasons. According to many nicht-psychologist views, motivating reasons are facts. My aim is to show that Wolff's motivation in pursuing this strategy is very different. The point is that due to his commitment to the Principle of Sufficient Reason, Wolff has to show that error cases are compatible with the PSR. The issue is worth discussing because it is not yet sufficiently explored what motivating reasons are, according to Wolff, and how they relate, in substance, to normative reasons. Methodologically, my approach can be characterized as one of "mutual illumination": I think it is possible to highlight some crucial ambiguities of Wolff's conception against the backdrop of the contemporary conception of motivating reasons, but also to question the importance and role of the ontological question of what motivating reasons are in contemporary discussions against the backdrop of Wolff's position.