spring 05 topics in philosophy of mind session 1

Similar documents
spring 05 topics in philosophy of mind session 2

This is a collection of fourteen previously unpublished papers on the fit

Outsmarting the McKinsey-Brown argument? 1

spring 05 topics in philosophy of mind session 7

Externalism, Self-Knowledge and Transmission of Warrant

Content and Contrastive Self-Knowledge

Externalism and a priori knowledge of the world: Why privileged access is not the issue Maria Lasonen-Aarnio

In Meaning and Truth, J. Campbell, M. O Rourke, and D. Shier, eds. (New York: Seven Bridges Press, 2001):

TRANSMISSION OF WARRANT AND CLOSURE OF APRIORITY Michael McKinsey Wayne State University

Ayer s linguistic theory of the a priori

INTENTIONALITY AND SELF-KNOWLEDGE

Chalmers, "Consciousness and Its Place in Nature"

Please remember to sign-in by scanning your badge Department of Psychiatry Grand Rounds

Externalism and Armchair Knowledge *

Can A Priori Justified Belief Be Extended Through Deduction? It is often assumed that if one deduces some proposition p from some premises

THE TWO-DIMENSIONAL ARGUMENT AGAINST MATERIALISM AND ITS SEMANTIC PREMISE

The Problem of Armchair Knowledge 1

Of Skepticism with Regard to the Senses. David Hume

The readings for the course are separated into the following two categories:

Ayer and Quine on the a priori

Disarming the externalist threat to self-knowledge

Transition: From A priori To Anselm

Boghossian & Harman on the analytic theory of the a priori

Wright on response-dependence and self-knowledge

Summary of Sensorama: A Phenomenalist Analysis of Spacetime and Its Contents

Naming Natural Kinds. Åsa Maria Wikforss Stockholm University Department of Philosophy Stockholm

Putnam: Meaning and Reference

Yuval Dolev, Time and Realism, MIT Press, 2007

Moore s paradoxes, Evans s principle and self-knowledge

Constructing the World

INTERPRETATION AND FIRST-PERSON AUTHORITY: DAVIDSON ON SELF-KNOWLEDGE. David Beisecker University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Some proposals for understanding narrow content

Wittgenstein on the Fallacy of the Argument from Pretence. Abstract

Hume on Ideas, Impressions, and Knowledge

1 The Problem of Armchair Knowledge 1

DO WE NEED A THEORY OF METAPHYSICAL COMPOSITION?

APRIORISM IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF LANGUAGE

Philosophy 203 History of Modern Western Philosophy. Russell Marcus Hamilton College Spring 2014

HOW TO BE (AND HOW NOT TO BE) A NORMATIVE REALIST:

The Externalist and the Structuralist Responses To Skepticism. David Chalmers

Speaking My Mind: Expression and Self-Knowledge by Dorit Bar-On

Constructing the World

24.09 Minds and Machines Fall 11 HASS-D CI

PHILOSOPHY OF MIND (7AAN2061) SYLLABUS: SEMESTER 1

1/12. The A Paralogisms

JUSTIFICATION INTERNALISM, SELF KNOWLEDGE, AND MENTAL CONTENT EXTERNALISM. By Amber Ross. Chapel Hill 2006

Final Paper. May 13, 2015

Naturalism Primer. (often equated with materialism )

Saul Kripke, Naming and Necessity

A Posteriori Necessities

SKEPTICISM, ABDUCTIVISM, AND THE EXPLANATORY GAP. Ram Neta University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture

Conceptual Analysis and Reductive Explanation

Kripke on the distinctness of the mind from the body

Varieties of Apriority

Seeing Through The Veil of Perception *

ON EPISTEMIC ENTITLEMENT. by Crispin Wright and Martin Davies. II Martin Davies

IN THIS PAPER I will examine and criticize the arguments David

Hitoshi NAGAI (Nihon University) Why Isn t Consciousness Real? (2) Day 2: Why Are We Zombies?

Indeed, the main significance of this book is that it shows implicitly, but very clearly quite how much of Putnam s contribution to his philosophy is

Theories of the mind have been celebrating their new-found freedom to study

Semantic Externalism, by Jesper Kallestrup. London: Routledge, 2012, x+271 pages, ISBN (pbk).

Self-ascription, self-knowledge, and the memory argument

DOUBT, CIRCULARITY AND THE MOOREAN RESPONSE TO THE SCEPTIC. Jessica Brown University of Bristol

Received: 30 August 2007 / Accepted: 16 November 2007 / Published online: 28 December 2007 # Springer Science + Business Media B.V.

Constructing the World

Seigel and Silins formulate the following theses:

Externalism and Norms *

Physicalism and Conceptual Analysis * Esa Díaz-León.

The Kripkenstein Paradox and the Private World. In his paper, Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Languages, Kripke expands upon a conclusion

Van Inwagen's modal argument for incompatibilism

Content Externalism and the Internalism/ Externalism Debate in Justification Theory

Moral Relativism and Conceptual Analysis. David J. Chalmers

Philip Goff a a University of Hertfordshire. To link to this article:

Purple Haze: The Puzzle of Consciousness

SUPPORT MATERIAL FOR 'DETERMINISM AND FREE WILL ' (UNIT 2 TOPIC 5)

A Review of Neil Feit s Belief about the Self

CARTESIANISM, NEO-REIDIANISM, AND THE A PRIORI: REPLY TO PUST

Ethical non-naturalism

The Phenomenal Concept Strategy

Review of David J. Chalmers Constructing the World (OUP 2012) David Chalmers burst onto the philosophical scene in the mid-1990s with his work on

Am I free? Free will vs. determinism

out in his Three Dialogues and Principles of Human Knowledge, gives an argument specifically

Elements of Mind (EM) has two themes, one major and one minor. The major theme is

Kant s Copernican Revolution

On David Chalmers's The Conscious Mind

CHRISTIANITY AND THE NATURE OF SCIENCE J.P. MORELAND

To be able to define human nature and psychological egoism. To explain how our views of human nature influence our relationships with other

Debate on the mind and scientific method (continued again) on

This handout follows the handout on The nature of the sceptic s challenge. You should read that handout first.

Naturalized Epistemology. 1. What is naturalized Epistemology? Quine PY4613

Philosophy Courses-1

PHL340 Handout 8: Evaluating Dogmatism

VERIFICATION AND METAPHYSICS

Skepticism and Internalism

Scepticism, brains in vats, and the matrix

KANT, MORAL DUTY AND THE DEMANDS OF PURE PRACTICAL REASON. The law is reason unaffected by desire.

Foreknowledge, evil, and compatibility arguments

A Posteriori Necessities by Saul Kripke (excerpted from Naming and Necessity, 1980)

Bertrand Russell Proper Names, Adjectives and Verbs 1

Transcription:

24.500 spring 05 topics in philosophy of mind session 1 self-knowledge 24.500 S05 1

no class next thursday 24.500 S05 2

self-knowledge = knowledge of one s mental states But what shall I now say that I am, when I am supposing that there is some supremely powerful and...malicious deceiver..?...at last I have discovered it thought; this alone is inseparable from me. I am, I exist that is certain. But for how long? For as long as I am thinking Descartes claims that he can t rationally doubt that he is thinking, but he can rationally doubt that he has a hand, or that his father has a mind, etc. 24.500 S05 3

self-knowledge: privileged and peculiar access Image removed due to copyright considerations privileged access (roughly): one s beliefs about one s mental states are more likely to amount to knowledge than beliefs about one s environment and others mental states (at least in nonfactive cases) I may, in saying that I see the cigarette case, be claiming more than the experience strictly warrants: it is logically consistent with my having just this experience that there should not be a cigarette case there, or indeed any physical object at all. It may be suggested, therefore, that if I wish to give a strict account of my present visual experience, I must make a more cautious statement. I must say not that I see the cigarette case, if this is to carry the implication that there is a cigarette case there, but only that it seems to me that I am seeing it. (Ayer 1956, 96) 24.500 S05 4

peculiar access Image removed due to copyright considerations one knows that there is a cigarette case on the table, that it contains cigarettes, that Freddie wants a cigarette, etc., by observation one s access to one s own mind is not like this (if there is such a thing as inner observation, it is quite unlike the more familiar sort) privileged and peculiar access can come apart Ryle (privileged but not peculiar) The superiority of the speaker s knowledge of what he is doing over that of the listener [indicates]...only that he is in a very good position to know what the listener is in a very poor position to know. The turns taken by a man s conversation do not startle or perplex his wife as much as they had surprised and puzzled his fiancée, nor do close colleagues have to explain themselves to each other as much as they have to explain themselves to their pupils (1949, 171) myopic inner eye (peculiar but not privileged) 24.500 S05 5

the main topic of the seminar understanding privileged and peculiar access but we ll start with the inevitable the apparent conflict between externalism and privileged access first, some other themes and issues 24.500 S05 6

detectivism/shoemaker s broad perceptual model inner sense theories (Armstrong, Lycan) Block s attentional theory expressivism letter-expressivism (inspired by Wittgenstein) neo-expressivism (Bar-On) self-knowledge as a necessary condition of: rationality (Shoemaker) critical reasoning (Burge) 24.500 S05 7

extravagance vs. economy inner sense theories extravagant behaviorism economical Shoemaker s view economical unity vs. diversity behaviorism unified Block s attentional theory diverse 24.500 S05 8

the puzzle of transparency And, in general, that which makes the sensation of blue a mental fact seems to escape us: it seems, if I may use a metaphor, to be transparent we look through it and see nothing but the blue; we may be convinced that there is something but what it is no philosopher, I think, has yet clearly recognized. (Moore 1903, 37) that the mug is blue is feeble evidence for the proposition that one sees blue a similar phenomenon for belief and knowledge the puzzle of transparency: how can we have knowledge of our own mental states on the basis of such seemingly irrelevant evidence? 24.500 S05 9

[I]n making a self-ascription of belief, one s eyes are, so to speak, or occasionally literally, directed outward upon the world. If someone asks me Do you think there is going to be a third world war?, I must attend, in answering him, to precisely the same outward phenomena as I would attend to if I were answering the question Will there be a third world war?. (Evans 1982, 225) With respect to the attitude of belief, the claim of transparency tells us that the first-person question Do I believe P? is transparent to, answered in the same way as, the outward-directed question as to the truth of P itself. (Moran 2001, 66) the claim of Transparency is something of a paradox: how can a question referring to a matter of empirical psychological fact about a particular person be legitimately answered without appeal to the evidence about that person, but rather by appeal to a quite independent body of evidence? (Moran 2003, 413) 24.500 S05 10

Dretske on zombies Zombies, in Dretske s usage, are human-like creatures who are not conscious and, therefore, not conscious of anything (2003, n. 1, 9) In normal (i.e. veridical) perception, then, the objects you are aware of are objective, mindindependent objects. They exist whether or not you experience them Everything you are aware of would be the same if you were a zombie. In having perceptual experience, then, nothing distinguishes your world, the world you experience, from a zombie s. This being so, what is it about this world that tells you that, unlike a zombie, you experience it? What is it that you are aware of that indicates that you are aware of it? (2003, 1, note omitted) 24.500 S05 11

Dretske s conclusion Skeptical suspicions are, I think, rightly aroused by this result. Maybe our conviction that we know, in a direct and authoritative way, that we are conscious is simply a confusion of what we are aware of with our awareness of it (see Dretske forthcoming). (9) 24.500 S05 12

three puzzles of transparency For what we are aware of, when we know that we see a tree, is nothing but a tree. In fact, we only have to be aware of some state of the world in order to be in a position to make an assertion about ourselves. Now this might raise the following perplexity. How can it be that we can have knowledge of a state of affairs which involves a substantial and persisting self, simply by being aware of (still worse, by merely appearing to be aware of) a state of the world? (Evans 1982, 231) this is not quite the puzzle of transparency (which is not centrally a puzzle about the self) but it s close enough: How can it be that one can have knowledge of a state of affairs as it might be, that one sees that there is a tree there simply by seeing that there is a tree there? 24.500 S05 13

the first puzzle Argument K there is a tree there I know that there is a tree there Argument B there is a tree there I believe that there is a tree there P1: how can I come to know that I believe/know that p, by determining whether p? 24.500 S05 14

the second puzzle Argument S there is a tree there I see that there is a tree there there is a tree behind this wall problem: Argument S does not seem to set out the transparent reasoning so: what is the transparent reasoning, and how can it yield knowledge? P2: how can I come to know that I see that p, by looking at the scene before my eyes? 24.500 S05 15

the third puzzle Argument L there is a tree there it looks to me that there is a tree there P3: how can I come to know that it looks to me that p when I don t believe things are as they appear? 24.500 S05 16

externalism and self-knowledge 24.500 S05 17

Putnam s twin earth earth twin earth the oceans and lakes contain XYZ, which is a very different chemical kind from H 2 O, although superficially like it at normal temperatures and pressures 24.500 S05 18

water is wet twater is wet true just in case H 2 0 is wet true just in case XYZ is wet Oscar (on earth) Toscar (on twin earth) 24.500 S05 19

By privileged self-knowledge, I mean the view that we are able to know, without the benefit of empirical investigation, what our thoughts are in our own case compatibilism: externalism and privileged self-knowledge are compatible Anti-compatibilist arguments with this general form have been attempted in the past, but those earlier efforts have misstated the case See McKinsey, Anti-individualism and privileged access and the effective response by Anthony Bruecker (Boghossian, What the externalist can know a priori ) 24.500 S05 20

two incompatibilist arguments discrimination slow switching, etc. consequence a priori knowledge that water exists, etc. 24.500 S05 21

McKinsey and Brueckner each of us can know the existence and content of his own mental states in a privileged way that is available to no one else (McKinsey) privileged way : some version of privileged access 24.500 S05 22

available to no one else : some version of peculiar access merely by sitting in an armchair, one can know, just by thinking ( a priori ), that one is thinking that water is wet, for example I am thinking that water is wet 24.500 S05 23

McKinsey s argument - I 1 Oscar knows from the armchair ( a priori ) that he is thinking that water is wet 2 the proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies E (according to externalism) hence: C E can be known from the armchair 24.500 S05 24

McKinsey s argument - II hence: 1, 2, and 3 are inconsistent (so, if 1 and 3 are true, 2 (and so externalism) is false 1 Oscar knows from the armchair that he is thinking that water is wet 2 The proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies E 3 E can t be known from the armchair note that the argument just relies on peculiar access 24.500 S05 25

the proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies [?] E P metaphysically implies (entails) Q iff it is impossible that P is true and Q is false (i.e. there is no possible world in which P is true and Q is false; in every possible world w, if P is true in w, Q is also true in w) that the glass is full of water metaphysically implies that the glass is full of H 2 O that Paris Hilton exists metaphysically implies that Rick and Kathy Hilton exist 24.500 S05 26

the proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies [?] E P conceptually implies Q iff it is knowable a priori that it is not the case that P is true and Q is false (i.e. it is knowable a priori that if P is true, Q is true) that the glass is full of water does not conceptually imply that the glass is full of H 2 O that Jones drinks quickly conceptually implies that Jones drinks that Jones is a bachelor conceptually implies (?) that Jones is male 24.500 S05 27

implies must mean conceptually implies (else C would not follow) 1 Oscar knows from the armchair that he is thinking that water is wet 2 the proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies E (according to externalism) hence: C E can be known from the armchair 24.500 S05 28

the proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies E [?] McKinsey s E is a proposition describing Oscar s environment premise 2 says that one can know a priori (by considering Putnam s twin earth thought experiment) that if Oscar is thinking that water is wet then E is true but what is E, exactly? 24.500 S05 29

the proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies E [?] suggestion (Brueckner, interpreting McKinsey) E is the proposition that Oscar inhabits an environment containing H2O and not XYZ one cannot know E from the armchair but is it true that the twin earth thought experiment shows (a priori) that one can only think about water if there is H2O in one s environment? 24.500 S05 30

E = the proposition that water exists? 1 Oscar knows from the armchair that he is thinking that water is wet 2 The proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies that water exists (according to externalism) hence: C Oscar can know from the armchair that water exists C is obviously false so externalism is false 24.500 S05 31

but is 2 true? 2 The proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies that water exists (according to externalism) suppose hydrogen and oxygen exist, but hydrogen hydroxide doesn t scientists theorize that H 2 O exists (Brueckner, p. 202) they introduce a term, swater, for this chemical compound, and use it on Nova broadcasts, in Scientific American articles, etc. Oscar reads these articles and learns the new word (perhaps without remembering the chemical composition of swater) Oscar might say, I wonder whether swater is wet wouldn t he be wondering (in a waterless world) whether water is wet? 24.500 S05 32

E = the proposition that either water exists or some in Oscar s speech community theorize that H 2 O exists? 1 Oscar knows from the armchair that he is thinking that water is wet 2 The proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies that either water exists or... (according to externalism) hence: C Oscar can know from the armchair that either water exists or... C is obviously false so externalism is false 24.500 S05 33

but is 2 true? 2 The proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet implies that either water exists or some in Oscar s speech community theorize that H 2 O exists? no not if implies means conceptually implies 24.500 S05 34

Brueckner s final suggestion E is the proposition that there exist some physical entities distinct from Oscar Brueckner s response: are we so sure that this E is not knowable from the armchair? 24.500 S05 35

OK, but what about: E = the proposition that either water exists or some in Oscar s speech community theorize that water exists? 2 is (arguably) conceptually implied by the proposition that Oscar is thinking that water is wet, yet surely it is not knowable from the armchair 24.500 S05 36

enter Boghossian I claim that Oscar is in a position to argue, purely a priori, as follows: 1 If I have the concept water, then water exists [or other speakers who have the concept water exist] 2 I have the concept water Therefore, 3 water exists 24.500 S05 37

next time: Boghossian, What the externalist can know a priori McLaughlin and Tye, Externalism, twin earth, and self-knowledge Boghossian, Content and selfknowledge Burge, Individualism and self-knowledge optional background: McKinsey and Brueckner 24.500 S05 38