Mindshaping and Adaptive Preferences
摘要
Agents with adaptive preferences participate readily in oppressive social practices, even when doing so is in tension with their broader interests or overall well-being. To make sense of the way in which social influences sometimes undermine agency, I look to enactivist notions of embodied habit and mindshaping. Adaptive preferences should be understood as habit bundles that result from covert social influences, become rigidly engrained, and signify a localized autonomy deficit.