3. Methodology
This paper adopts a conceptual and analytical methodology, grounded in the method of reflective equilibrium, to explore the normative underpinnings of deliberative agency. Rather than pursuing empirical verification or psychological modeling, the inquiry proceeds through critical engagement with existing philosophical accountsâespecially those of Donald Davidson, Christine Korsgaard, Harry Frankfurt, John McDowell, R. Jay Wallace, and Nomy Arpalyâand aims to develop a constructive theoretical framework that both synthesizes and transcends their insights.
The method of reflective equilibrium enables a dialectical balance between intuitions about particular cases of agency and more general principles about what it means to act for reasons. This involves an iterative process: refining our understanding of intentional action in light of conceptual tensions, counterexamples, and theoretical desiderata, while also modifying background commitments where necessary to achieve coherence.
The paper draws on thought experiments, drawn from both classical sources (e.g., akratic action, weakness of will) and contemporary discussions (e.g., moral motivation without conscious endorsement, cases of rational regret), in order to pressure-test theoretical models of deliberation. These examples help illuminate the difference between merely causally effective mental states and those that function as authoritative reasons for action.
Additionally, conceptual analysis plays a central role, particularly in clarifying contested notions such as ânormativity,â âcommitment,â âpractical identity,â and âdeliberative authority.â Rather than assuming shared definitions, the paper seeks to explicate the internal structure and logical interrelations of these concepts, showing how they underwrite a distinctively normative account of agency.
By maintaining a focus on the first-personal standpoint, this methodology avoids reductive explanations that abstract away from the deliberative perspective of the agent. In so doing, it preserves the philosophical significance of rational agency as an irreducibly normative phenomenonâone that requires philosophical analysis rather than empirical reduction or behavioral description. The result is a model of deliberation that aspires to be not only conceptually rigorous but also sensitive to the real demands placed on agents in conditions of evaluative complexity and moral responsibility.
3.1. The Structure of Deliberation
Deliberation, at its philosophical core, is not simply a process of choosing among alternatives based on instrumental utility or subjective desire. Rather, it is a normatively guided activity, one that presupposes a conception of the agent as a self-reflective bearer of reasons. In this sense, to deliberate is not only to consider what one wants, but to assess what one ought to doâwhat is justifiable within a space of reasons that one recognizes as authoritative.
As Christine Korsgaard argues, âto act is to choose, and to choose is to valueâ (Korsgaard, 1996, p. 93). But such valuing is not arbitraryâit emerges from an agentâs practical identity, the self-conception that allows one to ask not only what to do but why to do it. Deliberation thus involves a kind of internal dialogue in which the agent occupies a normative standpoint, testing the coherence of various impulses, principles, and commitments. This structure requires that agents not only have desires or goals but also the capacity to evaluate and endorse certain reasons as binding.
Donald Davidsonâs influential theory of action (1980) famously posits that reasons can be causes, yet his modelâanchored in anomalous monismâdoes not fully capture the normative dimension of why some reasons justify actions while others merely explain them. An agent may be moved to act by a desire, but what distinguishes deliberative action is the endorsement of a reason as one that ought to count. As R. Jay Wallace (1994) notes, the very idea of responsibility presupposes that agents act under the guidance of reasons they recognize as normatively salient.
This commitment to normative appraisal distinguishes mere decision-making from deliberation. For example, consider an individual deciding whether to tell a painful truth or to remain silent. From a merely consequentialist frame, one might weigh potential outcomes; but within the deliberative structure of rational agency, the agent must assess not just outcomes, but duties, relationships, and principlesâsuch as honesty, care, or justiceâthat may override mere preference. The agent asks: What would it mean for me, as someone who values truthfulness or respects othersâ autonomy, to act in this way? In doing so, the agent does not merely consult desires, but interrogates their fit within a larger evaluative framework.
Harry Frankfurtâs (1988) theory of second-order volitions enriches this model by showing how agents are not just pushed by desires but take stands on them. Yet, Frankfurtâs framework lacks a sufficient account of how such commitments become normatively binding. Korsgaard fills this gap by arguing that âthe normative force of a reason lies in its relation to the identity of the agentâ (Korsgaard, 2009, p. 20). In deliberation, the agent is engaged in a kind of self-legislation, giving reasons that are not merely motivational but justificatory. This is a crucial distinction: one may be motivated by fear, but one cannot justify a cowardly act merely by citing fear. Justification appeals to reasons that withstand scrutiny under standards the agent endorses.
John McDowell (1996), through his notion of second nature, deepens this understanding by emphasizing that mature practical reasoners are not merely rational calculators but have undergone a process of habituation into the moral and rational space of reasons. Deliberation, in this sense, is a practice situated in a normative traditionâit reflects not just personal preference but a socially and historically embedded sense of the good.
Finally, Nomy Arpaly (2003) challenges the assumption that only explicitly endorsed reasons can be normative. Her account of inverse akrasiaâcases where agents do the right thing despite not endorsing the right reasonsâhighlights that sometimes-moral insight can operate beneath reflective awareness. Yet even these cases point to a deeper structure of rational agency: agents are attuned, even implicitly, to moral salience, and their responsiveness can still be normatively assessed.
In summary, deliberation is not a computational algorithm nor a raw negotiation of competing desires. It is a rationally structured activity through which agents determine what they ought to do by consulting a web of values, commitments, and identities. It presupposes not only the capacity for reflection but also the authority to bind oneself to reasons that survive such reflection. It is in this capacityâto deliberate, endorse, and act for reasonsâthat we find the distinctive normativity of rational agency.
3.2. The Normativity of Reasons
The normative dimension of reasons does not operate as an external imposition on the will, nor does it arise merely from sociocultural convention or psychological conditioning. Rather, normativity is constitutive of agency itself. To act as a rational agent is not merely to be moved by internal impulses or external stimuli, but to locate oneself within a space of justifications, where actions are guided by reasons that one can endorse as binding. This endorsement is not an optional feature of agencyâit is, as Christine Korsgaard (1996) famously argues, what constitutes the self as a unified agent capable of owning its actions.
Korsgaardâs constitutivist account insists that the authority of reason arises from the very structure of practical identity. âActing on a reason,â she writes, âis acting in a way that you can justify to yourselfâ (Korsgaard, 1996, p. 101). For her, normativity does not derive from some antecedent moral law or external command, but from the agentâs need to unify herself through reflective endorsement of principles. This process of self-constitution entails a critical distance from immediate inclinations and a capacity to adopt maxims that express oneâs valuesâmaxims that become binding precisely because they are necessary for maintaining oneâs practical unity.
This conception of normativity challenges both instrumentalist and naturalist accounts of action. Instrumentalist models, such as those stemming from Humean traditions, reduce reasons to mere tools for achieving antecedently given ends. But on Korsgaardâs view, ends themselves require justificationâand that justification can only be supplied by the agentâs reflective endorsement of the principles they embody. In this way, reasons are not mere instruments but conditions of autonomous agency.
Moreover, the normativity of reasons is not simply descriptive, as in some contemporary naturalist approaches that attempt to explain norm-guided behavior through evolutionary or neurobiological functions. While such models may account for how human beings come to exhibit rational capacities, they often fall short of explaining why some reasons have binding authority. As John McDowell (1996) observes, the domain of reasons is ânot law-governed like nature, but rule-governed in the space of concepts.â For McDowell, normative responsiveness is part of a second natureâa cultivated attunement to reasons that arises from moral education and social practice, not mechanistic causality.
Consider an illustrative case: an individual faces the decision to betray a friend for personal gain. The agent feels the pull of self-interest but also experiences guilt at the thought of violating a bond of trust. What transforms this from mere inner conflict to a deliberative choice is the agentâs capacity to reflectively assess the reasons involved. The betrayal may be advantageous, but it may also undermine the agentâs identity as a loyal friend or ethical person. If the agent refrains from betrayal, not merely out of fear or habit but because loyalty is a value she endorses as part of who she is, then the reason has normative forceâit binds because it emerges from her reflective self-understanding.
Korsgaardâs claim that we act under the âidea of freedomââthat we must see ourselves as capable of acting on principleâalso invites engagement with Kantian themes. Yet unlike Kantâs formalism, Korsgaard grounds normativity in the agentâs need for practical unity, thus avoiding the abstraction sometimes criticized in Kant. Her approach aligns more closely with the Aristotelian idea that ethical life involves habituating oneself into a rational form of life, but adds the modern insight that such habituation requires continual reflective endorsement.
In contrast, Nomy Arpaly (2003) complicates this picture by emphasizing that moral worth does not always align with reflective endorsement. Her account of inverse akrasiaâcases where agents do the right thing despite not endorsing the right reasonsâsuggests that responsiveness to moral salience can be non-reflective yet still normatively significant. This does not negate Korsgaardâs framework but refines it: normativity may sometimes exceed our reflective grasp, but it remains intimately tied to the agentâs capacity to recognize and respond to reasons, even when such recognition is intuitive rather than deliberative.
Thus, the authority of reasons lies not in their external imposition, but in their internal necessity for maintaining the coherence of agency. As Korsgaard (2009) writes, âIf there is no law you must give yourself, there is no self to give it.â The agent is, in this view, both the legislator and the subject of normativityâa dual role that affirms autonomy while preserving the bindingness of reasons.
To act, then, is to submit oneself to a structure of norms one recognizes as governing the space of reasons. It is this submissionânot to external compulsion, but to self-imposed lawâthat constitutes rational freedom. The normativity of reasons is the medium through which action becomes not just possible, but meaningfulâthe space where the agent no longer merely reacts but takes responsibility for what she does.
3.3. Practical Identity and Self-Commitment
Rational agency cannot be understood in abstraction from the agentâs self-conception. Every choice is made not from a neutral vantage point but from within a practical identityâa self-understanding shaped by the roles, values, and aspirations to which an agent commits. As Christine Korsgaard (1996) articulates, âYour identity is constituted by what you regard as reasons to act.â In this sense, practical identity is not merely descriptive (e.g., I am a teacher or a parent) but normative: it provides the framework within which certain reasons count as reasons for that agent.
The central claim of this section is that rational choice is intelligible only through the lens of self-commitment to particular roles and values. When an agent deliberates about whether to tell the truth, confront a friend, or resign from a job, their decisions are filtered through the normative lens of who they take themselves to be. To betray a friend, for example, is not just to violate a social rule but to fail to live up to a self-understandingâto act in a way that undermines oneâs integrity as a loyal person. Thus, practical identity is the medium through which reasons acquire their authority.
Harry Frankfurtâs (1988) conception of second-order desires and volitions forms a critical precursor to this view. For Frankfurt, what distinguishes persons from mere wantons is the capacity to reflect on their desires and endorse some over others, thereby creating a hierarchy that structures the will. A personâs identity, on this account, is not simply a matter of what one wants but what one wants to wantâthe desires one endorses as expressive of oneâs true self. However, Frankfurt leaves somewhat opaque the normative grounds on which such endorsement takes place. Why should an agent treat certain desires or commitments as authoritative?
Korsgaard (2009) addresses this lacuna by embedding Frankfurtâs insight within a broader constitutivist framework: the act of self-constitution, of binding oneself to principles that structure oneâs agency, is what gives second-order volitions their normative force. To endorse a desire is to incorporate it into a practical identityâan identity that must be maintained through coherent, deliberative action. For Korsgaard, this is not a static process but a dynamic self-commitment: âTo value anything at all, you must value your own humanity, and you must do so practically, by treating yourself as an endâ (Korsgaard, 1996, p. 122).
An agentâs practical identity therefore serves as both the source and the standard of normativity. It is what enables the agent to recognize some reasons as binding while dismissing others as irrelevant. Consider the case of a doctor who is offered a bribe to prioritize a patient. The temptation may appeal to self-interest, but if the agentâs identity is shaped by professional ethics and a commitment to justice, then the bribe cannot be endorsed without fracturing the coherence of that identity. Her refusal is not merely a matter of preference but a reaffirmation of her normative self-conception.
This model also resonates with John McDowellâs (1996) emphasis on the cultivation of second nature. McDowell argues that moral perception is not reducible to rule-following but is infused with a background of ethical training and habituation. Practical identity, on this view, is not imposed by external codes but formed through participation in forms of life that shape the agentâs responsiveness to reasons. The deliberating self is not a detached rational calculator but an embedded agent, whose identity mediates how the normative force of reasons is experienced and internalized.
However, one might object that practical identities are often conflicted, unstable, or imposed. Social roles can be constraining, and an individual may experience conflicting demands between identities (e.g., as a parent vs. a professional). The model advanced here does not deny this. Rather, it emphasizes that deliberation itself is the means by which agents negotiate these tensions. Rational agency is the capacity to assess, revise, and endorse identities reflectivelyâwhat Frankfurt might call âtaking responsibility for the selfâ and what Korsgaard calls âself-constitution.â Indeed, it is precisely because identities are complex and sometimes in tension that the normative structure of deliberation becomes essential.
Moreover, drawing on contemporary contributions from R. Jay Wallace (2006), we can deepen this picture by emphasizing the moral expectations embedded within identity. Wallace argues that our commitments generate ânormative expectationsâ that govern our interactions with others. In his account of responsibility, identity is not merely a personal project but a relational structure embedded in moral practices that hold us accountable. To act against a commitment is not simply to act out of character but to violate the normative expectations that othersâand ourselvesâhave formed on the basis of our avowed identity.
In light of this, practical identity is not a passive inheritance but a reflexively sustained project. Through acts of deliberation, agents reaffirm, revise, or repudiate their roles and commitments. It is this process of self-binding that gives rational action its normative intelligibility. Deliberation is not merely a computation of outcomes but a dialogue with the selfâa process in which reasons are weighed not only for their consequences but for their coherence with the agentâs ongoing project of being a certain kind of person.
In sum, the normative authority of reasons arises not in abstraction from the self but in relation to the practical identity that constitutes the self. Rational agency is a process of self-commitment through reasonâa process that binds the agent to her principles not as external laws, but as internal necessities of personhood.
3.4. From Thinking to Doing
The transition from deliberative thought to intentional action marks a critical threshold in the structure of rational agency. While much philosophical attention has been devoted to identifying the nature of reasons and their normative authority, less clarity exists about how agents move from reflectively endorsing a reason to enacting it. This section proposes that action is not a mere output of deliberation but a synthesis of reflective endorsement and embodied habituation, a point crucially informed by John McDowellâs concept of second nature.
For McDowell (1996), the capacity to act for reasons cannot be reduced to rule-following or algorithmic decision-making. Rather, it is the result of a kind of moral and practical upbringingâa habituation into forms of responsiveness that make certain actions âmake senseâ from within a rational perspective. He writes, âOur capacities to recognize reasons are not grounded in bare receptivity, but in a second nature shaped by upbringing into reason-governed practices.â This shaping is not merely causal; it constitutes the normative orientation necessary for moving from endorsement to action.
This transitionâfrom reflective thought to enactmentâcan be understood as a process of practical synthesis, in which the agentâs identity, background habits, and immediate circumstances converge to produce action. The deliberating agent does not merely ask âWhat ought I to do?â but integrates this question with âWhat am I doing?â in a temporally unfolding process of self-authorization. Action, then, is not a separate domain from thought, but its culmination. It is what happens when reasons are not only acknowledged but inhabited.
A paradigmatic case might be the decision to confront a colleague over an ethical violation. One may deliberate extensively, endorse the principle of integrity, and recognize the professional duty to act. However, the actual confrontationâspeaking the words, initiating the momentâis not simply caused by reflection, nor can it be fully explained by the reasons themselves. What enables the agent to move from reflective endorsement to courageous enactment is the integration of rational conviction with embodied readiness. This readiness is not innate but cultivatedâa result of prior actions, character formation, and the internalization of values through practice.
Harry Frankfurtâs (1988) account of volitional necessity further illuminates this point. He describes agents who, when acting on a deeply held commitment, experience their action as inevitableânot because they lack control, but because their identity and values leave no viable alternative. In such cases, action is not externally compelled but internally necessitated. The bridge from thought to doing, then, is formed not only by the logic of reasons but by the felt necessity of embodying them in a contextually appropriate form.
Still, this synthesis is fragile and contingent. Contemporary research in moral psychology and neuroscience has emphasized the dissonance that can arise between evaluative judgments and actual behavior (Greene & Haidt, 2002; Cushman, 2008). Such findings challenge any simplistic assumption that recognizing a reason will automatically produce corresponding action. However, these challenges do not refute the normative structure proposed here; rather, they underscore the difficulty and achievement involved in aligning thought with action. Failures to act on reasons can reflect not a breakdown of normativity but a deficiency in the agentâs practical integrationâan instability in identity, habituation, or situational courage.
This gap between thought and doing invites renewed attention to the role of practical imagination, a faculty often underexplored in accounts of agency. To act well, an agent must not only deliberate but envision the enactment of reasons, anticipate the emotional and social terrain, and preemptively reconcile the internal resistances that may arise. In this way, imagination becomes an enabling condition of rational agency, helping to bridge the abstract space of reasons with the concrete space of lived embodiment.
Moreover, as R. Jay Wallace (2006) and Nomy Arpaly (2003) argue, agents are often held morally responsible not merely for reflective rationality but for whether they are responsive to moral reasons in a reliable and authentic way. Arpaly, in particular, critiques the overemphasis on internal reflection and highlights non-deliberative responsivenessâactions that emerge from an internalization of moral sensitivity without discursive deliberationâas genuine expressions of moral agency. This supports the claim that reason-responsiveness must be cultivated, not merely acknowledged, and that such cultivation is what allows reflection to translate into action.
In sum, the movement from thinking to doing is not linear but dialectical and embodied. It involves the mutual interplay of reflective deliberation, habituated sensitivity, emotional preparedness, and situational responsiveness. Rational agency, then, is not reducible to cognition; it is a lived normativity, a practice of binding thought to the world through self-committed, identity-constitutive action.
3.5. Implications and Philosophical Payoff
The reconceptualization of deliberation as a normatively structured, identity-constituting process of rational agency yields significant implications across a range of contemporary philosophical domains. Most notably, it provides a fresh framework for rethinking autonomy, moral responsibility, and critiques of instrumental rationality, while also offering fertile ground for analyzing emerging challenges in AI ethics and cognitive science.
First, in the discourse on autonomy, this account departs from procedural or minimal conceptions that define autonomy merely in terms of non-interference or decision-making capacity. Instead, following Korsgaard (2009) and Frankfurt (1988), autonomy is here re-envisioned as the capacity to bind oneself to reasons one reflectively endorses, grounded in a deliberative relation to oneâs practical identity. This allows for a thicker, more substantive conception of the autonomous agentânot as a disengaged chooser, but as a being who stands in normative relation to their actions, through self-constitution. In this sense, true autonomy is a form of self-legislation, where deliberation is not just a psychological mechanism but a moral activity of shaping oneâs will.
Second, this view reshapes how we think about moral responsibility. The traditional model often assumes a direct causal connection between internal states (beliefs, desires, intentions) and outward behavior. But as R. Jay Wallace (2006) has argued, responsibility hinges not merely on control or awareness but on normative responsivenessâthe agentâs ability to recognize and act for the right reasons. By emphasizing the practical integration of identity, habituated sensitivity, and reflectively endorsed reasons, this account explains how responsibility is not exhausted by causal antecedents. Rather, it is earned through an ongoing practice of reason-guided self-governance, even when actions do not proceed from explicit deliberation.
Third, this argument intervenes in long-standing critiques of instrumentalism, especially in debates stemming from Humean and Kantian traditions. Instrumental viewsâwhere reason is merely a tool for satisfying pre-existing desiresâfail to account for how reasons can transform desires or override them altogether. McDowellâs (1996) conception of second nature, as well as Korsgaardâs constitutivism, provide resources for resisting this reduction. By foregrounding deliberation as normatively loaded, this paper supports the claim that agents are not merely calculators of outcomes but participants in the space of reasonsâa space shaped by values, commitments, and forms of life. This helps explain phenomena like moral transformation, akrasia, and conscientious dissent, which instrumental theories struggle to accommodate.
Finally, the implications of this account extend into the philosophy of mind and artificial intelligence, where questions of synthetic agency and ethical alignment have become urgent. Contemporary AI systems may simulate deliberationâranking options, predicting consequences, optimizing behaviorâbut they lack the normativity that constitutes human agency. They do not bind themselves to reasons, nor do they possess identities to which they are answerable. Even the most advanced AI lacks what Frankfurt calls âsecond-order volitionâ and what McDowell understands as âsecond nature.â This raises a critical challenge: without the capacity to experience reasons as binding, can AI ever be said to act, rather than merely behave?
Such questions are not only theoretical but urgent, as AI increasingly mediates decision-making in healthcare, justice, warfare, and governance. By clarifying what it means to move from thought to actionânot just causally, but normativelyâthis account offers a benchmark for distinguishing genuine agency from mere computation. In this light, any future claims about artificial moral agents must reckon with the irreducibility of normativity in action.
In sum, the philosophical payoff of this account is twofold. It deepens our understanding of human agency by grounding action in a normative, identity-based structure of deliberation. And it challenges prevailing assumptions in moral psychology, ethics, and AI by demonstrating that agency is not merely about having reasons but about being able to live them.