Questions of the Self in the Personal Autonomy Debate: Some Critical Remarks on Frankfurt and Watson

Original Articles

Questions of the Self in the Personal Autonomy Debate: Some Critical Remarks on Frankfurt and Watson

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 29 , issue 2 , 2010 , pages: 117–131
DOI: 10.4314/sajpem.v29i2.57055
Author(s): Sharli Anne Paphitis Department of Philosophy, South Africa

Abstract

Currently, the most influential accounts of personal autonomy, at least in the English-speaking world, focus on providing conditions under which agents can be said to exercise self-control. Two distinct accounts of personal autonomy have emerged in this tradition: firstly, hierarchical models grounded in the work of Harry Frankfurt; and secondly, systems division models most famously articulated by Gary Watson. In this paper, I will show the inadequacies of both of these models by exploring the problematic views of the self and self-control underlying each model. I will suggest that the problems faced by these models stem from the fact that they endorse a problematic fragmentation of the self.

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