Book contents
- Decisions about Decisions
- Decisions about Decisions
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Preface
- 1 Second-Order Decisions
- 2 Deciding to Opt
- 3 Deciding to Know
- 4 Deciding to Believe, 1
- 5 Deciding to Believe, 2
- 6 Deciding Inconsistently
- 7 Deciding to Consume, 1
- 8 Deciding to Consume, 2
- 9 Deciding by Algorithm
- 10 Deciding for Oneself
- Epilogue “Get Drunk!”
- Acknowledgments
- Index
Epilogue “Get Drunk!”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 June 2023
- Decisions about Decisions
- Decisions about Decisions
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Preface
- 1 Second-Order Decisions
- 2 Deciding to Opt
- 3 Deciding to Know
- 4 Deciding to Believe, 1
- 5 Deciding to Believe, 2
- 6 Deciding Inconsistently
- 7 Deciding to Consume, 1
- 8 Deciding to Consume, 2
- 9 Deciding by Algorithm
- 10 Deciding for Oneself
- Epilogue “Get Drunk!”
- Acknowledgments
- Index
Summary
We live in a period in which liberal ideas about personal autonomy is under considerable pressure. Can poems be liberal? Baudelaire’s Enivrez-Vous captures something essential about the most appealing forms of liberalism, and about its underlying spirit (captured, in different ways, by John Stuart Mill, Walt Whitman, and Bob Dylan as well): its insistence on freedom of choice, on the diversity of tastes and preferences, and on human agency. The poem is liberal in its exuberance – its pleasure in its own edginess, its defiance, its sheer rebelliousness, its sense of mischief, its implicit laughter, its love of life and what it has to offer. It is the opposite of dutiful. It is far more exuberant than Mill’s On Liberty, but it is exuberant in the same way. It tells us something important about autonomy and freedom.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Decisions about DecisionsPractical Reason in Ordinary Life, pp. 194 - 198Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023