AUTONOMY, VALUE, AND CONDITIONED DESIRE
American Philosophical Quarterly, January 1995.
Conditioning can produce desires that seem to be outside of--or "alien"
to--the agent. Desire-based theories of welfare claim that the satisfaction
of desires creates prudential value. But the satisfaction of alien desires
does not seem to create prudential value. To explain this fact, we need
an account of alien desires that explains their moral status. In this paper
I suggest that alien desires are desires that would be rational if the
person believed something that in fact she believes is false. Such desires
could be produced by mental representations--or "quasi-beliefs"--with contents
that conflict with the contents of one's beliefs. The postulation of quasi-beliefs
is plausible, for they explain important empirical facts about our behavior--facts
that are difficult if not impossible to explain otherwise. Alien desires,
I argue, involve quasi-beliefs with contents that conflict with the contents
of regular beliefs. This theory provides the distinction between alien
and authentic desires that desire-based theories of welfare need.