Higher Order Desire

In his famous paper "Freedom of the Will and the Concept of a Person", Harry Frankfurt explains higher order desires. To simplify, higher order desires are the desires we have about our first order desires. For example, a person may want to use cocaine, but he may not want to want to use cocaine. Frankfurt uses many examples of types of drug addicts to illustrate his arguments. Though the paper is considered highly influential and important, his arguments about what constitutes a "person" in the moral sense of the term and what defines free will are controversial and criticized for not taking into account the complicated nature of the human mind and its desires. Even within his paper, he notes that he has simplified these complexities, while still illuminating important aspects of moral and legal philosophy.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
marcus valerius messala corvinus ii
sm 125
henry rutgers
catch and release (congress)
denniston, new zealand
wright r 1820
highway 17
satellite flare
infoanarchism
nanpo shoto
chicago 16
list of poker related topics
sud aviation vautour
spectrum (band)
wright cyclone
azzam the american
juan pujol
myod
montgomery m. taylor
donald k. stern
jose palma
i, max
michael holley
papa gino's
pratt & whitney wasp
wilhelm wulff
tuscumbia
tallgrass prairie
chicago 17
ciriaco de mita
polish operation of the nkvd
lettice knollys
gsk 3
pat noonan
option contract
lusiada university
politics of the united states during world war ii
chris albertson
macquarie fields
chicago 18
pratt & whitney r 1830
ubu productions, inc.
shindig!
giovanni goria