Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2022
Different questions generate different forms of practical reasoning. A contextually unrestricted ‘What shall I do?’ is too open to focus reflection. More determinately, an agent may ask, ‘Shall I do X, or Y?’ To answer that, he may need to weigh things up—as fits the derivation of ‘deliberation’ from libra (Latin for ‘scales’). Ubiquitous and indispensable though this is, I mention it only to salute it in passing.1 Or he may ask how to achieve a proposed end: if his end is to do X, he may ask ‘How shall I do X?’ Or he may ask how to apply a universal rule or particular maxim.2 Aristotle supplies examples in De Motu Animalium (7.701a7 ff.), whose wording I freely adapt to my own purposes:
A1 reasons to a necessary means to achieving an end:
I will make a cloak.
To make a cloak I must do A.
So, I will do A.
A2 reasons to a sufficient means to achieving an end:
I will make something good.
A house is something good.
So, I will make a house.
B1 applies a universal rule:
Every man must walk.
I am man.
So, I must walk.
B2 applies a conditional that speaks of a particular agent at a certain time:
I will now make a cloak if I need one.
I need a cloak.
So, I will now make a cloak.
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