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Against Better Judgment

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Anthropologists have long explained social behaviour as if people always do what they think is best. But what if most of these explanations only work because they are premised upon ignoring what ...
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  • 09 June 2023
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Anthropologists have long explained social behaviour as if people always do what they think is best. But what if most of these explanations only work because they are premised upon ignoring what philosophers call 'akrasia' – that is, the possibility that people might act against their better judgment? The contributors to this volume turn an ethnographic lens upon situations in which people seem to act out of line with what they judge, desire and intend. The result is a robust examination of how people around the world experience weaknesses of will, which speaks to debates in both the anthropology of ethics and moral philosophy.

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Price: £104.00
Pages: 204
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Imprint: Berghahn Books
Series: WYSE Series in Social Anthropology
Publication Date: 09 June 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781805390008
Format: Hardcover
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“This volume opens up the important subject of akrasia, one that any approach to the relationship between judgment and action needs to address. It is a very welcome addition to the literature.” • Michael Lambek, University of Toronto

Introduction
Patrick McKearney and Nicholas H.A. Evans

Chapter 1. Trigger Warnings: Danger, Desire, and Declensions of the Will in Eating Disorders Treatment
Rebecca J. Lester

Chapter 2. Three Problems with the Addiction as Akrasia Thesis that Ethnography Can Solve
Darin Weinberg

Chapter 3. To Live Like ‘People’: Drinking and Weakness of Will Among the Runa of the Ecuadorian Amazon
Francesca Mezzenzana

Chapter 4. Prayer, Demons, and Akratic Sublation
Jon Bialecki

Chapter 5. Troubleshooting Humans: Modelling the Pathways to Inertia, Backsliding, and Moral Transgression on Indonesia’s Hypnotherapy Circuit
Nicholas J. Long

Chapter 6. The ‘Replication’ of Caste as a Form of Collective Akrasia
Ivan Deschenaux

Chapter 7. Is Grit Irrational for Akratic Agents?
Lubomira Radoilska

Chapter 8. Relational Akrasia: Care and the Distribution of Action
Patrick McKearney

Afterword
Richard Holton

Index