Summary |
Rational requirements, as the expression has come to be
used, are requirements of coherence – for instance, the requirements to be
consistent in your beliefs and in your intentions, and to intend what you take
to be the necessary means to the ends you intend. The central questions about
such requirements include: (i) how are rational requirements best formulated? For
instance, should we accept so-called wide- or narrow-scope formulations of rational
requirements (ii) Are there reasons to comply with rational requirements (that
is, to be coherent)? If not, in what sense, if any, is rationality normative? (iii)
How do rational requirements relate to other kinds of requirements (for
instance, requirements of morality or prudence) and other normative notions,
such as reasons, ‘ought’, and good reasoning? |