inintendibility
Inintendibility is a term used in philosophy and cognitive science to describe the quality of being unintended or not part of a deliberate plan. It refers to events, actions, or consequences that arise spontaneously or as a byproduct of other processes, rather than being directly aimed for or consciously willed. The concept explores the distinction between what an agent actively seeks to achieve and what happens as a result, even if those results are foreseeable.
This notion is relevant in discussions of agency, responsibility, and causality. For instance, in the realm
The term highlights the complexity of human action and the world. It acknowledges that not everything that