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LanCog seminar: Jeremy Pober on desire

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Ricardo Santos

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Mar 11, 2025, 3:54:51 PMMar 11
to Lekton - Lista Portuguesa de Filosofia

SEMINAR SERIES IN ANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY

2024-25: Session 17

 

The Guise of the Rewarding

Jeremy Pober (LanCog, University of Lisbon)

 

14 March 2025, 16:00 (Lisbon Time – WET)

Faculdade de Letras de Lisboa

Sala Mattos Romão [C201.J] (Departamento de Filosofia)

 

Abstract: Among empirically sensitive theories of desire, a prominent strain (Arpaly and Schroeder 2014; Schroeder 2004; Pober forthcoming) defines desire in terms of ‘reward’, where ‘reward’ is a technical term derived from its use in the psychology of decision-making. Per these Reward Theories, desires are realized in states of the reward learning system. This system records and constantly updates the reward value of various objects an agent/organism encounters, such that the more rewarding an object type, the more, ceteris paribus, the agent/organism is disposed to behave in ways that support obtaining it. Meanwhile, among other theories of desire, representational, or ‘guise of the good’ theories claim the defining characteristic of desires is that they represent their objects as good in some way. The most influential strain take the vehicle of the representation to be a quasi-perceptual state (Oddie 2005; Tenenbaum 2007). I propose that these two families of views can be fruitfully combined. The core idea is that ‘rewarding’ is understood as a sort of evaluation of goodness, in particular a subjective valuation (Levy and Glimcher 2012), and, in turn, the reward learning system is the vehicle of the evaluations that constitute desire. The resulting ‘Guise of the Rewarding’ view has, I shall argue, advantages over each of its constituents.

 

All are welcome, in-person!

--
Ricardo Santos
Professor Catedrático | Full Professor
Director do Centro de Filosofia da Universidade de Lisboa
Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa
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