Abstract
To outward appearances, teleological description and explanation of human conduct have lately been regenerating themselves, phoenix-like, from the ashes to which they were reduced by positivism and behaviorism. In the words of Israel Scheffler, “Teleological explanations have, it is true, been largely expunged from the natural sciences, since it is no longer acceptable to attribute beliefs or purposes to physical objects. Such explanations are, however, of enduring relevance in the human sciences, history, literature, and everyday life, where the beliefs and purposes of people are of major interest in characterizing and predicting their conduct.”