Abstract

ABSTRACT This article identifies a tension between two forms of respect: respect for others’ agency and respect for their rationality. This tension emerges, the article argues, when one person presents another with a nuanced argument on an important topic, thereby complimenting their rationality, but draining their agential resources by demanding their attention. Giving someone an argument can therefore generate a structurally similar double bind to giving them a puppy as a present: Refusing is normatively uncomfortable, but accepting requires a significant sacrifice. The article concludes by considering how certain factors can weaken the double bid, including rhetoric.

Journal
Philosophy & Rhetoric
Published
2025-04-01
DOI
10.5325/philrhet.58.1.0095
Open Access
Closed

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  1. Philosophy & Rhetoric
Also cites 4 works outside this index ↓
  1. “Two Kinds of Respect.”
    Ethics  
  2. “Entitled to Attention? Cooperativity, Context, and Standing.”
    Journal of Philosophical Research  
  3. “Rational Persuasion as Paternalism.”
    Philosophy & Public Affairs  
  4. Watzl, Sebastian. 2022. “The Ethics of Attention: An Argument and a Framework.” In Salience: A Philosophical …
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