Higher-order volitions (or higher-order desire), as opposed to action-determining volitions, are volitions about volitions. Higher-order volitions are potentially more often guided by long-term convictions and reasoning.
A first-order volition is a desire about anything else, such as to own a new car, to meet the pope, or to drink alcohol. Second-order volition are desires about desires, or to desire to change the process, the how, of desiring. Examples would be to desire to want to own a new car; meeting the pope; or to desire to quit drinking alcohol permanently. A higher-order volition can go unfulfilled due to uncontrolled lower-order volitions.
An example for a failure to follow higher-order volitions is the drug addict who takes drugs even though he would like to quit taking drugs. According to Harry Frankfurt the drug addict has established free will, in respect to that single aspect, when his higher-order volition to stop wanting drugs determines the precedence of his changing, action determining desires either to take drugs or not to take drugs. — Wikipedia
For instance, the drug addict can go to extremes to get his fix, and is able to set aside other desires and use reason to do so... what would disqualify it from being a higher order desire according to the wiki description? — ChatteringMonkey
Conflicting desires absolutely, but that doesn't necessarily imply a natural hierarchy or a seperate desire to resolve conflicts. — ChatteringMonkey
The alarm goes. We just get out of bed, get to work on time. It is only when we stop to think "why?" that a conflict may be revealed, a habitual state of desire start to break down into competing impulses. — apokrisis
So, what is happening when we pause and reflect on an action before it is undertaken? Is there indeed some higher order volition operating in the background as we go by doing things? As if some narrator who wants to see things done in a certain way for some ultimate purpose? — Posty McPostface
I think there is some truth to there being a higher-order volition if everyone's mind that guides us through life. Would you agree with that assessment? — Posty McPostface
I am saying this is the socially constructed aspect of human voluntary behaviour. We are taught that we have to be in charge of our every action. That then cashes out as learning to pay attention where that seems necessary. — apokrisis
So a narrator is us standing in for society inside our heads, running everything through that cultural filter. — apokrisis
An exhausting business, eh? :grin: — apokrisis
My view is that this higher-order of choosing is the social one. And that is still so even when modern culture is supposedly all about the celebration of the self-actualising individual. — apokrisis
So I definitely don't see any higher order volition in the sense of tapping into some hidden better self that lies beyond our ugly animal impulses. That is Romanticism. — apokrisis
But also, that Romantic model of the self is exactly the one which has evolved as the best way to sell pro-social modern behaviour. It maximises our individual competitive freedoms within a restraining framework of social co-operation.
So we are taught to believe this myth about the nature of human individuality. We are actually socially constructed creatures. But believing we are completely responsible for all our own successes and failures in life is the way to produce the modern citizen, completely at home in a striving, neo-liberal, self-reliant, upwardly mobile and consumerist world ... — apokrisis
But, a higher-order volition seems to be something else in some manner. Speaking of falling in love or being a good citizen or such, aren't reflexive attitudes towards reality; but, wholly self-cultivated. Thus, them being of a higher-order. Self-love is perhaps, as per Harry Frankfurt, the highest of volitions one can have. — Posty McPostface
Well, having read some of Frankfurt's works, he does talk about self love, being the highest-order volition that one can attain. — Posty McPostface
Yes, the concept seems to have gotten exploited to some degree by society at large. — Posty McPostface
Are they wholly self-cultivated? They are supposedly top of the national school curriculum where I live. They are a basis of a healthy education and a healthy society. — apokrisis
So sure, there are higher order thoughts about our desires. But it is constructing that conscious hierarchy that is point. It is a basic skill we need to learn. And schools are meant to institutionalise that. — apokrisis
Loving your fellow humans and a shared environment also seem pretty important. Self-love would be part of the balanced mix. — apokrisis
I think it is clear it has run out of control and taken on a life of its own. Society starts to exist for its own sake. Or worse yet, for the sake of a privileged elite.
But it is hard to push social democracy once a muddled philosophy of the human condition has become as pervasive in popular global culture as it has. — apokrisis
Well, self-love is almost entirely self cultivated. — Posty McPostface
I take it you live in some Scandinavian country? — Posty McPostface
I don't quite know how malleable are passions and desires, through reasoning to them. — Posty McPostface
Care to expand on that last part a little more? — Posty McPostface
Most psychologists would say it is down to a loving childhood environment. It is only the lack of that means you would have to make an effort on your own. — apokrisis
You don't argue with them. You construct suitable habits that give them useful employment. — apokrisis
We need to be thinking really selfishly to continue the way we are behaving. And so that is the culture we have created. One that ensures we won't suddenly turn nutty and green. — apokrisis
Yes, but it comes down to the nuclear family, and those conditions. The best social environment doesn't matter if the nuclear family is dysfunctional. — Posty McPostface
The cultivation of good traits, though, is highly individualistic, and hard to persuade otherwise. — Posty McPostface
I agree, but, if you ask my generation, the Millennial, they'll tell you that behaving selfishly is *ucked, and has lead to their current predicament or the predicament we will face in the future. Also, consumer behaviour is changing dramatically. People, on the grassroots scale, are more aware of the problem that climate change entails than on the macro scale, which is lagging as much as it can due to special interest groups and others. Besides, *it's the economy stupid*, that is changing minds. Electric vehicles are simply superior to gas powered automobiles. Solar panels, are *cool* and people want them. So, I would say that some semblance of a higher-order volition for the world is at play. At worst it's the economy working its magic in unseen ways. — Posty McPostface
In what sense would a best social environment have nuclear families? Isn't that a big part of the problem? — apokrisis
You are very pessimistic. Social science tells otherwise. Moving to another country likewise. — apokrisis
Now you are very optimistic. I agree that this is all possible. But how do you explain Trump, for instance. The smarter we need to be, the dumber we are prepared to vote. — apokrisis
As for the unseen magic of the markets, the world has run off the road into the muddy ditch and is spinning its wheels with the accelerator rammed to the floor. Vast debt, zero interest rates. In a year, everywhere you know could be Venezuela. — apokrisis
Higher-order volitions (or higher-order desire), as opposed to action-determining volitions, are volitions about volitions. — Wikipedia
People who are very hungry will eat whatever they can find: grass, bugs, boot leather. But one would not generally say that they desire these things. Their desire is more likely for steak and chips, macaroni cheese, and ice-cream, or whatever their cultural equivalents are. — unenlightened
Desire is for what one does not have. It is an attractive image to be realised, or not. When I say image, I mean any form of representation that may be also verbal, tactile, olfactory, etc, not strictly visual. — unenlightened
Mental life is in the business of representations, and seemingly inevitably, I represent myself to myself, and thereby am able to form desires for an imagined self. "I wish I was young, handsome, intelligent, rich, talented and loved by everyone." This seems to be what wiki means by 'higher-order volitions'. — unenlightened
So, do we have higher order volitions? It would seem so to my mind. — Posty McPostface
So I think we do have these higher-order volitions, but I'm not convinced that they are distinctive enough to recognise separately. :up: :smile: — Pattern-chaser
Well, a higher order volition stems, most often, from a feeling (most often love, or most appropriately). — Posty McPostface
Second-order volition are desires about desires, or to desire to change the process, the how, of desiring. — Wikipedia
Suppose I am at best a mediocre husband and father, but I wish I was better, and try to be better. That's a higher desire or volition, no? (Incidentally, are you happy to say that volition is a desire one tries to realise, as distinct from a desire one entertains but does not act on for whatever reason?) — unenlightened
But suppose I am a mediocre burglar, but I wish I was better, and try to be better. You don't want to call that a 'higher desire', though it has the same form, of an ambition to transform myself? — unenlightened
There's a process of desiring? It feels to me like desire is an emotion, or something pretty similar. For that reason, I wonder if there is a process at all, or if it's just something we do - or feel - without process, planning or anything else. :chin: — Pattern-chaser
How can I meaningfully have a desire about a desire? — Pattern-chaser
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