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Intention Talks

An intention is a mental state in which a person commits themselves to a course of action. Having the plan to visit the zoo tomorrow is an example of an intention. The action plan is the content of the intention while the commitment is the attitude towards this content. Other mental states can have action plans as their content, as when one admires a plan, but differ from intentions since they do not involve a practical commitment to realizing this plan. Successful intentions bring about the intended course of action while unsuccessful intentions fail to do so. Intentions, like many other mental states, have intentionality: they represent possible states of affairs.

Theories of intention try to capture the characteristic features of intentions. The belief-desire theory is the traditionally dominant approach. According to a simple version of it, having an intention is nothing but having a desire to perform a certain action and a belief that one will perform this action. Belief-desire theories are frequently criticized based on the fact that neither beliefs nor desires involve a practical commitment to performing an action, which is often illustrated in various counterexamples. The evaluation theory tries to overcome this problem by explaining intentions in terms of unconditional evaluations. That is to say that intentions do not just present the intended course of action as good in some respect, as is the case for desires, but as good all things considered. This approach has problems in explaining cases of akrasia, i.e. that agents do not always intend what they see as the best course of action. A closely related theory identifies intentions not with unconditional evaluations but with predominant desires. It states that intending to do something consists in desiring it the most. Opponents of this approach have articulated various counterexamples with the goal of showing that intentions do not always coincide with the agent's strongest desire. A different approach to the theories mentioned so far is due to Elizabeth Anscombe and denies the distinction between intentions and actions. On her view, to intend a goal is already a form of acting towards this goal and therefore not a distinct mental state. This account struggles to explain cases in which intentions and actions seem to come apart, as when the agent is not currently doing anything towards realizing their plan or in the case of failed actions. The self-referentiality theory suggests that intentions are self-referential, i.e. that they do not just represent the intended course of action but also represent themselves as the cause of the action. But the claim that this happens on the level of the content of the intention has been contested.

The term "intention" refers to a group of related phenomena. For this reason, theorists often distinguish various types of intentions in order to avoid misunderstandings. The most-discussed distinction is that between prospective and immediate intentions. Prospective intentions, also known as "prior intentions", involve plans for the future. They can be subdivided according to how far they plan ahead: proximal intentions involve plans for what one wants to do straightaway whereas distal intentions are concerned with a more remote future. Immediate intentions, on the other hand, are intentions that guide the agent while they are performing the action in question. They are also called "intentions-in-action" or "act-related" intentions. The term "intention" usually refers to anticipated means or ends that motivate the agent. But in some cases, it can refer to anticipated side-effects that are neither means nor ends to the agent. In this case, the term "oblique intention" is sometimes used. Intentions are rationally evaluable: they are either rational or irrational. Conscious intentions are the paradigmatic form of intention: in them, the agent is aware of their goals. But it has been suggested that actions can also be guided by unconscious intentions of which the agent is not aware.

The formation of intentions is sometimes preceded by the deliberation of promising alternative courses of action and may happen in decisions, in which the agent chooses between these alternatives. Intentions are responsible for initiating, sustaining, and terminating actions and are frequently used to explain why people engage in a certain behavior. Understanding the behavior of others in terms of intentions already happens in early childhood. Important in this context is the role of gestures, pointing, attention, and eye movement to understand the intentions of others and to form shared intentions. In the philosophy of action, a central question is whether it is true for all intentional actions that they are caused or accompanied by intentions. The theory of reasoned action aims to predict behavior based on how pre-existing attitudes and subjective norms determine behavioral intentions. In ethics, the intention principle states that whether an action is morally permissible sometimes depends on the agent's intention for performing this action.

From intention on Wikipedia

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Title Speaker

Attentionality, not Conceptuality

Serial: RB-03084

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Torei, Yuanwu, Practice, Intention, Patience
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Nov 15 2019
Johanneshof

Zen Mindfulness: Embracing Constant Change

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Nov 2019
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Serial: RB-03177

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Culture, Practice, Intention
Aug 2019
Johanneshof

Trusting the Path to Perception

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Koan, Intention, Practice
Aug 2018
Johanneshof

Breath Bridges Body and Consciousness

Serial: RB-03662

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Consciousness, Intention, Practice
Sep 2017
Hannover

Zen: Unspoken Insights, Lived Spaces

Serial: RB-03967

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Practice, Time, Intention
Sep 2016
Hannover

Zen Mind Beyond Ego Constraints

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Consciousness, Practice, Intention
May 2016
Rastenberg

Zen's Dance of Coherent Perception

Serial: RB-03055

Seminar_Weaving_Our_Own_History

Practice, Intention, Time
May 2016
Rastenberg

Mindful Crafting in Zazen Practice

Serial: RB-02791

Seminar_The Practice_and_Experience_of_Change

Posture, Intention, Stillness
Feb 2016
Johanneshof

Evolving Zen: Practice Transforms Mindfulness

Serial: RB-03846

Seminar_Basic_Attitudes_Teachings_and_Practices_in_Zen

Practice, Time, Intention
Jul 2015
Hannover

Zen in Everyday Moments

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Sesshin

Practice, Intention, Zazen
Jun 2015
Johanneshof

Awakening Intention Through Zen Attention

Serial: RB-03890

Seminar_Attentional_Awareness

Intention, Practice, Buddha
Mar 2015
Johanneshof

Breath Beyond Self: Intentional Awareness

Serial: RB-03697

Seminar_The_Continuum_of_the_Self

Intention, Breath, Culture
Sep 2014
Hannover

Intention's Dance in Zen Practice

Serial: RB-03698

Seminar_The_Continuum_of_the_Self

Intention, Breath, Consciousness
Sep 2014
Hannover

Zen Mind: Awareness in Multiplicity

Serial: RB-02283

Seminar_Zen_and_Psychotherapy

Intention, Consciousness, Practice
Sep 2014
Kassel

Perception and Control in Zen Practice

Serial: RB-02582

Seminar_Buddha-Fields

Practice, Bell, Intention
Jun 2014
Rastenberg

Embodied Time in Zen Practice

Serial: RB-02913

Seminar_Zen_and_Psychotherapy

Time, Practice, Intention
Jun 2014
Rastenberg

Embodying Presence Beyond Perception

Serial: RB-03128

Conference

Posture, Intention, Breath
Oct 2012

Beyond Intention: Embracing Mental Posture

Serial: RB-01684D

Seminar_The Self,_Continuity_and_Discontinuity

Practice, Time, Intention
Sep 2012
Hannover

Open-Ended Awareness Through Zen

Serial: RB-03855

Seminar_Zen_in_the_Western_World

Intention, Practice, Wisdom
Sep 2011
Hannover

Beyond the Self: Zen Perspectives

Serial: RB-03167

Seminar_Zen-Self,_West-Self

Intention, Time, Practice
Sep 2011
Johanneshof

Identity Unfolding: A Zen Perspective

Serial: RB-03171

Seminar_Zen-Self,_West-Self

Intention, Practice, Time
Sep 2011
Johanneshof

Mindful Awareness Unveiled Through Zen

Serial: RB-03170

Seminar_Zen-Self,_West-Self

Consciousness, Intention, Practice
Sep 2011
Johanneshof

Cultivating Zen: Intention, Practice, Patience

Serial: RB-03477

Practice-Period_Talks

Intention, Practice, Patience
Mar 07 2011
Crestone Zen Mountain Center

Seeing Through the Lens of Interconnection

Serial: RB-01682F

Seminar_What_Is_the_World?

Practice, Intention, Vow
Mar 2011
Johanneshof

Zen Unveiled: Mindful Self-Discovery

Serial: RB-01681G

Seminar_Zen_and_Psychotherapy

Practice, Intention, Anger
Oct 2010
Kassel

Breath Paths to Present Clarity

Serial: RB-01679G

Seminar_The_New_Mind

Breath, Intention, Practice
Aug 2010
Johanneshof

Transcending Mind Through Zazen Awareness

Serial: RB-01679D

Seminar_The_New_Mind

Consciousness, Intention, Practice
Aug 2010
Johanneshof

Unwrapping Mindful Presence in Buddhism

Serial: RB-01675

Ordination

Intention, Precepts, Practice
Sep 2009
Johanneshof

Zen's Blank Slate Journey

Serial: RB-04018

Seminar_Minds_of-Zazen

Practice, Meditation, Intention
Jun 2009
Rastenberg

Zen Mind, Therapeutic Wholeness

Serial: RB-01674D

Seminar_Zen_and_Psychotherapy

Work, Intention, Zazen
May 2009
Rastenberg

Embodied Zen: Spine to Mind

Serial: RB-01671E

Seminar_Zen_Mind

Practice, Breath, Intention
Feb 2009
Johanneshof

Embodied Awareness Through Zen Practice

Serial: RB-01671I

Seminar_Zen_Mind

Consciousness, Practice, Intention
Feb 2009
Johanneshof

Spinal Awareness Through Zen Connection

Serial: RB-01671D

Seminar_Zen_Mind

Breath, Intention, Practice
Feb 2009
Johanneshof

The Language of Being in Zen

Serial: RB-01671H

Seminar_Zen_Mind

Intention, Practice, Zazen
Feb 2009
Johanneshof

Zen Courage: Transformative Mindfulness Practices

Serial: RB-01665A

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Intention, Ceremony, Practice
Jul 2008
Johanneshof

Fluid Self: Embracing Dynamic Consciousness

Serial: RB-01663E

Seminar_The_Self

Intention, Consciousness, Practice
May 2008
Rastenberg

Zen Impermanence: Redefining Presence

Serial: RB-01664F

Seminar_Zen_and_Psychotherapy

Consciousness, Impermanence, Intention
May 2008
Rastenberg

Beyond Self: The Dynamic Process

Serial: RB-01663K

Seminar_The_Self

Consciousness, Practice, Intention
May 2008
Rastenberg

Mindfulness: Awareness in Everyday Life

Serial: RB-01660E

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Mindfulness, Practice, Intention
Sep 2007
Hannover

Body-Centric Paths to Awareness

Serial: RB-01660D

Seminar_The_Four_Foundations_of_Mindfulness

Practice, Mindfulness, Intention
Sep 2007
Hannover

Breath, Language, and Non-Intention

Serial: RB-01657D

Seminar_Dogen_Statements_with Norman Fisher

Breath, Time, Intention
Jul 2007
Johanneshof

Zen Discontinuity: Just This Moment

Serial: RB-02903

Practice-Period_Talks

Practice, Practice Period, Intention
Mar 30 2007
Crestone Zen Mountain Center

Embodying Stillness: The Zen Mind

Serial: RB-02892

Practice-Period_Talks

Intention, Posture, Zazen
Feb 02 2007
Crestone Zen Mountain Center

Zen Clarity Through Present Awareness

Serial: RB-02895

Practice-Period_Talks

Offering, Intention, Practice
Feb 01 2007
Crestone Zen Mountain Center

Beyond Thought: Embracing Actuality

Serial: RB-02905

Practice-Period_Talks

Practice, Intention, Bowing
Jan 30 2007
Crestone Zen Mountain Center

East Meets West: Consciousness and Self-Transformation

Serial: RB-01659B

Talk

Buddhism, Practice, Intention
2007
Kessel

Awakening Through Mindful Non-Self

Serial: RB-01654B

Sesshin

Practice, Zazen, Intention
Dec 2006
Johanneshof

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