The pragmatist account of action in Brandom's Making it Explicit offers a compelling defense of social embeddedness of acting. Its virtue consists of redefining the agent's reasons for action in terms of her public commitments and entitlements.
However, this account remains too intellectualist insofar as it neglects the embodied sense allowing the agent to respond to various situational demands and social constraints. In my article, I provide a less disembodied account of action that draws on Dreyfus's emphasis on bodily skills as constitutive aspects of intentional acting.
Dreyfus' notion of absorbed coping certainly highlights the role of body and affectivity in guiding the performance of action, but it ends up in underestimating the role of discursive and conceptual capacities in human agency. Against Dreyfus, I will demonstrate that involved and embodied coping not only answers to the demands of a given situation, but also involves responsiveness to reasons.
My ambition is to defend a continuity between practical reasoning, i.e. our capacity to justify our performances through reasons, and our embodied coping skills, a continuity that has been overlooked by Brandom's intellectualist and denied by Dreyfus' anti-rationalist accounts.