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Self-Deception and Paradoxes of Rationality

Jean-Pierre Dupuy

"Self-Deception is one of the topics that lends itself best to the task of exploring the possibilities of cross-fertilization between "continental philosophy" and "analytic philosophy". Fifty years ago, in Being and Nothingness, Sarte defined the core notion of "Bad Faith" as lying to oneself. On the other side of the Atlantic, Self-Deception has become one of the most exciting puzzles in the philosophy of mind, and a number of paradoxes encountered by the theory of rational choice involve that very same notion. One of the objectives of the conference was to show that bridges can be thrown over the gap between the two traditions, but also that both of them make self-deception too intrapsychic and suffer from a serious individualistic bias. The conferences was intended to explore the intersubjective and social dimensions of self-deception.

The conference was conceived as a confrontation between three (very) different sources of ideas, models, theories regarding self-deception-a confrontation which had never taken place before:

1) Donald Davidson's philosophy of mind and philosophy of action;

2) the literature on the foundations of rational choice theory and, in particular, the so-called "paradoxes of rationality"

3) René Girard's theory of mimetic desire and its relationship to Sartre's "onto-phenomenology"."

-Jean-Pierre Dupuy from the "Introduction"

4/15/98

ISBN (Paperback): 1575860686

ISBN (Cloth): 1575860694

Subject: Philosophy; Self-Deception

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