• Internalist and Externalist Theories: The Diversity of Reasons for Acting
    Dissertation, University of Maryland, College Park. 1990.
    Although common-sense moral theories tend to hold that everyone has reason to act morally, Bernard Williams argues in "Internal and External Reasons" that an agent has no reason to act if the act in question fails to promote any desire or project of hers. Williams considers this a logical property of reasons for acting and refers to this position as "internalism." ;After critically examining Williams' specific arguments, I use a heterogeneous group of arguments to show that internalism oversimpl…Read more