Chapter 1. The Need for Metaphysics + Introduction

Similar documents
Think by Simon Blackburn. Chapter 7b The World

Theory of knowledge prescribed titles

Unit 2. WoK 1 - Perception. Tuesday, October 7, 14

Phil 1103 Review. Also: Scientific realism vs. anti-realism Can philosophers criticise science?

The Philosophy of Physics. Physics versus Metaphysics

Think by Simon Blackburn. Chapter 7a The World

! Jumping ahead 2000 years:! Consider the theory of the self.! What am I? What certain knowledge do I have?! Key figure: René Descartes.

Introduction to Philosophy PHL 221, York College Revised, Spring 2017

CONTENTS. INTRODUCTORY Chapter I ETHICAL NEUTRALITY AND PRAGMATISM

Ayer on the argument from illusion

The British Empiricism

Metaphysical Language, Ordinary Language and Peter van Inwagen s Material Beings *

The absurdity of reality (case study in the

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND

1/8. The Third Analogy

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

Philosophy 125 Day 1: Overview

Epistemology for Naturalists and Non-Naturalists: What s the Difference?

PHI2391: Logical Empiricism I 8.0

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

Rationalism. A. He, like others at the time, was obsessed with questions of truth and doubt

A Graphical Representation of the Reconstructionist World-View (with a Mixture of Science Thrown in for Good Measure) by Ronald W. Satz, Ph.D.

Kant s Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals

Kant and his Successors

Introduction to Philosophy

Revelation, Humility, and the Structure of the World. David J. Chalmers

24.01 Classics of Western Philosophy

To appear in The Journal of Philosophy.

Chapter 18 David Hume: Theory of Knowledge

Philosophy Quiz 12 The Age of Descartes

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

Lecture 18: Rationalism

Kant & Transcendental Idealism

Introduction to Cognitivism; Motivational Externalism; Naturalist Cognitivism

The knowledge argument

Examining the nature of mind. Michael Daniels. A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000).

Philosophy (PHILOS) Courses. Philosophy (PHILOS) 1

1/7. The Postulates of Empirical Thought

PHILOSOPHY OF KNOWLEDGE & REALITY W E E K 4 : I M M A T E R I A L I S M, D U A L I S M, & T H E M I N D - B O D Y P R O B L E M

PHILOSOPHY OF KNOWLEDGE & REALITY W E E K 3 D A Y 2 : I M M A T E R I A L I S M, D U A L I S M, & T H E M I N D - B O D Y P R O B L E M

Important dates. PSY 3360 / CGS 3325 Historical Perspectives on Psychology Minds and Machines since David Hume ( )

Being and the Hyperverse

Mind s Eye Idea Object

Think by Simon Blackburn. Chapter 7c The World

Title II: The CAPE International Conferen Philosophy of Time )

K.V. LAURIKAINEN EXTENDING THE LIMITS OF SCIENCE

Lesson 2 The Existence of God Cause & Effect Apologetics Press Introductory Christian Evidences Correspondence Course

Ethical non-naturalism

Comments on Leibniz and Pantheism by Robert Adams for The Twelfth Annual NYU Conference on Issues in Modern Philosophy: God

Philosophy 1100 Introduction to Ethics. Lecture 3 Survival of Death?

PHIL 251 Varner 2018c Final exam Page 1 Filename = 2018c-Exam3-KEY.wpd

According to Russell, do we know the self by acquaintance? (hint: the answer is not yes )

science, knowledge, and understanding

MATHEMATICAL ANTINOMIES.

The Scientific Revolution. Foundation of Modernity Presented By: Tiffany Forward, Melissa Lye, and Nadine Rockwood.

Metaphysics & Consciousness. A talk by Larry Muhlstein

Summary of Kant s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals

Has Logical Positivism Eliminated Metaphysics?

Philosophy 125 Day 13: Overview

a0rxh/ On Van Inwagen s Argument Against the Doctrine of Arbitrary Undetached Parts WESLEY H. BRONSON Princeton University

Wright on response-dependence and self-knowledge

Minds and Machines spring Hill and Nagel on the appearance of contingency, contd spring 03

The Externalist and the Structuralist Responses To Skepticism. David Chalmers

A-LEVEL RELIGIOUS STUDIES

Language and the World: Unit Two

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

THE TWO-DIMENSIONAL ARGUMENT AGAINST MATERIALISM AND ITS SEMANTIC PREMISE

Primitive Concepts. David J. Chalmers

Free Will or Determinism - A Conundrum Mark Dubin February 14, 1994

Cartesian Dualism. I am not my body

Fundamentals of Metaphysics

Reality Bubbles Consciousness and the Problem of Matter

Causation and Free Will

Notes on Bertrand Russell s The Problems of Philosophy (Hackett 1990 reprint of the 1912 Oxford edition, Chapters XII, XIII, XIV, )

A (Very) Brief Introduction to Epistemology Lecture 2. Palash Sarkar

Legal Positivism: the Separation and Identification theses are true.

DO WE NEED A THEORY OF METAPHYSICAL COMPOSITION?

PHILOSOPHY A.S. UNIT 2 PAPER, JANUARY 2009 SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO SELECTED QUESTIONS

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

Divisibility, Logic, Radical Empiricism, and Metaphysics

The evolution of the meaning of SCIENCE. SCIENCE came from the latin word SCIENTIA which means knowledge.

John Locke No innate ideas or innate knowledge

Today s Lecture. Preliminary comments on the Problem of Evil J.L Mackie

Unit. Science and Hypothesis. Downloaded from Downloaded from Why Hypothesis? What is a Hypothesis?

Direct Realism and the Brain-in-a-Vat Argument by Michael Huemer (2000)

BonJour Against Materialism. Just an intellectual bandwagon?

Alexander of Hales, The Sum of Theology 1 (translated by Oleg Bychkov) Introduction, Question One On the discipline of theology

PHILOSOPHICAL RAMIFICATIONS: THEORY, EXPERIMENT, & EMPIRICAL TRUTH

Lecture 7.1 Berkeley I

Humean Supervenience: Lewis (1986, Introduction) 7 October 2010: J. Butterfield

Orthodox truthmaker theory cannot be defended by cost/benefit analysis

Aspects of Western Philosophy Dr. Sreekumar Nellickappilly Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras

BERKELEY, REALISM, AND DUALISM: REPLY TO HOCUTT S GEORGE BERKELEY RESURRECTED: A COMMENTARY ON BAUM S ONTOLOGY FOR BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS

Philosophy 301L: Early Modern Philosophy, Spring 2011

UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT QUESTION BANK

Ayer on the criterion of verifiability

Intro. The need for a philosophical vocabulary

1/10. Primary and Secondary Qualities and the Ideas of Substance

Words and their Meaning

Knowledge in Plato. And couple of pages later:

Transcription:

Chapter 1. The Need for Metaphysics + Introduction According to Richard Taylor, metaphysics (and philosophy in general, I imagine) is not practical or empirical knowledge. Rather, it is or has as its goal--a kind of wisdom (or understanding). (This is one of two pictures of Richard Taylor in Google images.)

What good is this wisdom? Metaphysics (or philosophy in general) is needed because certain questions simply press themselves upon (some) thoughtful people. So metaphysics can satisfy our curiosity. Second, according to Taylor, it might help us to live a better life, either by helping us to rise above over-simplified world-views (See below) or parochial material and selfish desires, which lead us to pursue illusory satisfactions. [This is hint of the Buddhist strain that Taylor inherited from Schopenhauer, a German philosopher of the early 19 th century.] Some examples of questions that one might : What am I? A body? A soul? A composite being? Do I really die? (Schopenhauer thought this question was the source of metaphysics.) What is this world, and why is it such? (8) Must everything in fact have a reason to be the way it is, or is there at some level brute contingency or chance? What can one think about the gods? (8) 2

How does one try to answer such questions? There are easy ways authority and wishfulfillment the numberless substitutes that are constantly invented and tirelessly peddled to the simple-minded, usually with stunning success (7) Taylor has in mind ideologies and religions, belief systems with ready-made answers to all the hard questions. Wisdom is supposed to protect or insulate us from these glittering gems and baubles. (7) It is arguable that such ideologies do great realworld harm. E. g., doctrinaire free-market views and Ayn Randism (Alan Greenspan and the bubble.) Then there is the hard way, the way of the metaphysician. But what way is that? One starts with data beliefs of common sense that are firmly held. One notes problems or inconsistencies amongst the data. One then tries to come to a reflective, consistent balance amongst them. (This is Aristotle s method.) We may sooner or later have to abandon some of our common-sense data, but when 3

we do, it should be in deference to certain other common-sense beliefs that we are even more reluctant to relinquish, and not in deference to philosophical theories that are appealing. (3) Philosophy then seems the attainment of a sophisticated sort of consistency. Logic can help by determining which sets of beliefs are consistent. Logic alone can t tell you what beliefs to drop in an inconsistent set. One ought to be prepared to drop any datum (or theory, for that matter). Fallibilism. This method seems sound as far as it goes, but why are data restricted to common sense? For the last 500 years, the major source of difficulty for our common-sense data has been science. o Newtonian laws vs. freedom, mechanism vs. mind, fields vs. particles, unique Now vs. relativity of simultaneity, non-euclidean geometries vs our intuitive idea of space, chance in Quantum Mechanics o Why should these hard-won results of careful investigation not be considered 4

along with the unreflective deliverances of common sense? Taylor himself uses scientific results in his argument against dualism below. (tu quoque, ad hominem) Let us go back to a question that Taylor posed, the question of ontology: What is this world, and why is it such? To answer this question, it would seem that one has to decide between Eddington s two tables. Sir Arthur Eddington 5

Eddington s Table1 is the table of common sense. It is solid and continuously coloured on its surface. His Table2 is the table of basic physics. It is mostly empty space and not coloured. It merely reflects light of certain wavelengths, which we perceive as coloured. The latter is a complex relation; the former is a monadic property. Primary vs. secondary qualities, (the mass of an object vs the heat of a fire). This decision, if one really does have to decide, goes far beyond trying to evaluate the competing claims of common sense. Note that there are three possible solutions to the two tables question. 1. Table2 is the real table. I need not tell you that modern physics has by delicate test and remorseless logic assured me that my second scientific table is the only one which is really there (xiv) 6

2. Table1 is the real table. Eddington doesn t quite endorse or propose this solution, but he does say this: On the other hand I need not tell you that modern physics will never succeed in exorcising that first table--strange compound of external nature, mental imagery and inherited prejudice--which lies visible to my eyes and tangible to my grasp. (xiv) Eddington might be saying that tables (or more generally substances) are a part of our way of perceiving the world--a feature that we impose on our experience or use to order our experience (rather than something that we find in experience). Perhaps, that is, substance is a category (as Kant suggested). A modern cognitive psychologist might theorize, in much the same vein, that we have a substance module--a part of the brain the organizes the raw input of our experience into substances. In this 7

case, as Eddington claims, the category is wired into our perceptual system(s), and isn t optional. Bear in mind, however, that even if a category has been wired into our brains (by evolution, perhaps), what that category describes need not be a feature of the best scientific picture of the world. So one must consider the possibility that the world contains only table2 while we are constrained to find table1 in our direct or everyday (untutored) experience. As an example of what I mean (or, perhaps, just an analogy that might be helpful), we still see and speak of the sun rising in the east in the morning and setting in the west at night, even though we know that it does no such thing. The rising and setting of the sun is an appearance, generated by the Earth s rotation on its axis from west to east. 3. Somehow, we can have both. You speak paradoxically of two worlds. Are they not really two aspects or two interpretations of one and the same world? 8

Yes, no doubt they are ultimately to be identified [that is, held to be one and the same thing] after some fashion. (xiv) As we will see shortly, Leibniz s Principle of the Indiscernibility of Identicals (InId) raises a prima facie problem for such an identification. Sir Arthur Eddington 9