Epistemic Normativity for Naturalists

Similar documents
Ought implies can against epistemic deontologism: beyond doxastic involuntarism

5AANA009 Epistemology II 2014 to 2015

Lecture 5 Rejecting Analyses I: Virtue Epistemology

NATURALIZING EPISTEMIC VIRTUE

PH 1000 Introduction to Philosophy, or PH 1001 Practical Reasoning

UNITY OF KNOWLEDGE (IN TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABILITY) Vol. I - Philosophical Holism M.Esfeld

TWO ACCOUNTS OF THE NORMATIVITY OF RATIONALITY

Philosophical Ethics. Distinctions and Categories

Intro. The need for a philosophical vocabulary

Why there is no such thing as a motivating reason

Quine s Naturalized Epistemology, Epistemic Normativity and the. Gettier Problem

Deontological Perspectivism: A Reply to Lockie Hamid Vahid, Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences, Tehran

M.A. PROSEMINAR, PHIL 5850 PHILOSOPHICAL NATURALISM Fall 2018 Tuesdays 2:35-5:25 p.m. Paterson Hall 3A36

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ARISTOTELIAN SOCIETY. Normative Facts and Reasons FABIENNE PETER SENATE HOUSE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON THE WOBURN SUITE

Is Truth the Primary Epistemic Goal? Joseph Barnes

THE UNBELIEVABLE TRUTH ABOUT MORALITY

Skepticism and Internalism

WHY THERE REALLY ARE NO IRREDUCIBLY NORMATIVE PROPERTIES

Terence CUNEO, The Normative Web. An Argument for Moral Realism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008, 263 pp., 46.99, ISBN

DANCY ON ACTING FOR THE RIGHT REASON

Ethics (ETHC) JHU-CTY Course Syllabus

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

Understanding and its Relation to Knowledge Christoph Baumberger, ETH Zurich & University of Zurich

Introduction to Cognitivism; Motivational Externalism; Naturalist Cognitivism

Let us begin by first locating our fields in relation to other fields that study ethics. Consider the following taxonomy: Kinds of ethical inquiries

Correspondence. From Charles Fried Harvard Law School

ARE THE MORAL FIXED POINTS CONCEPTUAL TRUTHS?

World without Design: The Ontological Consequences of Natural- ism , by Michael C. Rea.

Epistemic Consequentialism, Truth Fairies and Worse Fairies

The Oxford Handbook of Epistemology

THE METAPHYSICS OF REASONS

INTUITION AND CONSCIOUS REASONING

CLASS PARTICIPATION IS A REQUIREMENT

Action in Special Contexts

Instrumental reasoning* John Broome

WEEK 1: WHAT IS KNOWLEDGE?

Explanatory Indispensability and Deliberative Indispensability: Against Enoch s Analogy Alex Worsnip University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

is knowledge normative?

Review of Erik J. Wielenberg: Robust Ethics: The Metaphysics and Epistemology of Godless Normative Realism

Buck-Passers Negative Thesis

Ethics is subjective.

THE MORAL FIXED POINTS: REPLY TO CUNEO AND SHAFER-LANDAU

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

Introduction Naturalized virtue epistemology

Epistemic norms. Pascal 5936 words signs

NATURALISED JURISPRUDENCE

Edinburgh Research Explorer

Moral Objectivism. RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary

Epistemology as Engineering? (Forthcoming in Theoria, Vol. 72, Part 1, 2006) no empirical, scientific theory of knowledge can be normative in the way

THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY Undergraduate Course Outline PHIL3501G: Epistemology

Facts, Ends, and Normative Reasons

Philosophy 427 Intuitions and Philosophy Russell Marcus Hamilton College Fall 2011

Jacob Ross AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION. Ethics, Epistemology, Practical Reason EMPLOYMENT

Epistemological Disjunctivism and The Internalist Challenge

Curriculum Vitae. Joseph Mendola

McDowell and the New Evil Genius

GS SCORE ETHICS - A - Z. Notes

Vol. II, No. 5, Reason, Truth and History, 127. LARS BERGSTRÖM

Reliabilism and the Value Problem. Christoph Jäger, Innsbruck. Draft May forthcoming in Theoria (2010)

Howard Sankey Department of History and Philosophy of Science University of Melbourne

SUBJECTIVISM ABOUT NORMATIVITY AND THE NORMATIVITY OF INTENTIONAL STATES Michael Gorman

Lost in Transmission: Testimonial Justification and Practical Reason

Kantian Deontology. A2 Ethics Revision Notes Page 1 of 7. Paul Nicholls 13P Religious Studies

PL 399: Knowledge, Truth, and Skepticism Spring, 2011, Juniata College

Towards Richard Rorty s Critique on Transcendental Grounding of Human Rights by Dr. P.S. Sreevidya

Cameron Boult. Employment. Education. Research Areas. Publications. Book Reviews

What Should We Believe?

-- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text.

Moral Twin Earth: The Intuitive Argument. Terence Horgan and Mark Timmons have recently published a series of articles where they

Reason Papers Vol. 36, no. 1

On the Nature of Intellectual Vice. Brent Madison, United Arab Emirates University, Al-Ain, UAE

A Contractualist Reply

Naturalism and is Opponents

From the Categorical Imperative to the Moral Law

7AAN4021 General Philosophy

KNOWLEDGE, JUSTIFICATION, AND THE NORMATIVITY OF EPISTEMOLOGY

The New Puzzle of Moral Deference. moral belief solely on the basis of a moral expert s testimony. The fact that this deference is

Reactions & Debate. Non-Convergent Truth

Skepticism, Naturalism, and Therapy

How Successful Is Naturalism?

Kant s Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals

Let s Bite the Bullet on Deontological Epistemic Justification: A Response to Robert Lockie 1 Rik Peels, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

SIMON BOSTOCK Internal Properties and Property Realism

Two Kinds of Ends in Themselves in Kant s Moral Theory

THEISM, EVOLUTIONARY EPISTEMOLOGY, AND TWO THEORIES OF TRUTH

(naturalistic fallacy)

In Defense of Pure Reason: A Rationalist Account of A Priori Justification, by Laurence BonJour. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,

Sosa on Epistemic Value

MSc / PGDip / PGCert Epistemology (online) (PHIL11131) Course Guide

DO NORMATIVE JUDGEMENTS AIM TO REPRESENT THE WORLD?

ZAGZEBSKI ON RATIONALITY

Can Rationality Be Naturalistically Explained? Jeffrey Dunn. Abstract: Dan Chiappe and John Vervaeke (1997) conclude their article, Fodor,

Oxford Scholarship Online Abstracts and Keywords

Prof Paul O Grady 16 th January, What is Wisdom?

Introduction: Paradigms, Theism, and the Parity Thesis

A Priori Skepticism and the KK Thesis

On the alleged perversity of the evidential view of testimony

Gary Ebbs, Carnap, Quine, and Putnam on Methods of Inquiry, Cambridge. University Press, 2017, 278pp., $99.99 (hbk), ISBN

Testimony and Moral Understanding Anthony T. Flood, Ph.D. Introduction

David Copp, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Ethical Theory, Oxford: Oxford University

Transcription:

Epistemic Normativity for Naturalists 1. Naturalized epistemology and the normativity objection Can science help us understand what knowledge is and what makes a belief justified? Some say no because epistemic facts are inherently normative. 1 Science leaves open the question of how things ought to be, whether they are wrong, good, justified, and the like. But since epistemology is essentially about how things ought to be it is entirely autonomous from science. In response to this objection, many naturalists have opted for what Wrenn (2006) calls the engineering reply. Naturalism can preserve the normative character of epistemology, the reply goes, because epistemology is normative in the same way that engineering is: it tells us what means we ought to take in order to attain certain ends, and such instrumentally normative facts are not autonomous from science. In this paper, I argue that naturalists should abandon the engineering reply in favor of what I call a deflationist reply. According to deflationism, what is essential to epistemic facts is not genuine or robust normativity, but rather mere norm-relativity. Since mere normrelativity is not autonomous from science, epistemology need not be autonomous from science. Naturalists should go for the deflationist reply, I argue, because it (i) avoids the problems of the engineering reply and (ii) withstands objections. 2. Problems for the engineering reply Problem 1: The engineering reply assumes epistemic consequentialism. According to epistemic engineers, to evaluate a belief epistemically is to evaluate how conducive it is to epistemic goals. But this is only true if epistemic consequentialism is true. This is a problem for two reasons. First, epistemic consequentialism is highly controversial. Many reject epistemic consequentialism. 2 Therefore, the engineering reply alone is not sufficient to convincingly refute the normativity objection. It also needs defence of consequentialism. Second, the issue between epistemic consequentialism and non-consequentialism is itself a normative epistemological question. The problem, however, is that the engineering reply implausibly treats this debate as trivial. Problem 2: The engineering reply assumes normative naturalism. According to the engineering reply, epistemic facts are both natural and normative. But the question whether natural facts can be normative is highly controversial. Many metaethicists and normativity theorists (some of whom e.g. normative error theorists and expressivists accept metaphysical naturalism) argue that they cannot. While some of them invoke versions of G.E. Moore s (1903) famous Open Question argument, others argue that natural facts are just too different from normative facts - as Enoch (2011) puts it - to be normative. 3 1 E.g. Sellars (1956), Kim (1988). 2 See for instance Firth (1981), Jenkins (2007), Littlejohn (2012), Berker (2013a), (2013b), and Greaves (2013) for criticisms of epistemic consequentialism. 3 See also e.g. Scanlon (1998), Dancy (2006), Parfit (2011), and Olson (2014). A related problem is that the engineering reply assumes that normativity can come from our ends, i.e. that facts about what we care about can suffice to ground normativity. But such a desire-based or internalist story of the source of normativity is similarly controversial.

Problem 3: Epistemic evaluations are inescapable. You cannot escape or opt out of epistemic evaluations by simply not caring about epistemic ends. Your false and wishful belief about P is epistemically unjustified whether or not you want to know the truth about whether P. Consequently, if these standards are inherently normative (as epistemic engineers concede), then their normativity is inescapable. The problem, however, is that the engineering reply makes epistemic normativity escapable or goal-dependent; it is conditional on having or caring about the end in question. 3. An alternative: the deflationist reply Metaethicists standardly distinguish between genuine or robust normativity and mere normrelativity. 4 While all norms trivially set standards relative to which certain things can be required, permitted, and the like, not all norms automatically have robust normative authority. There is not necessarily a robust reason to conform to e.g. etiquette, club rules, fashion, laws, etc. This distinction means that facts and claims can be norm-implying without being robustly normative. This opens the door to the following alternative to the engineering reply: Step 1: Epistemic deflationism. While epistemic facts are norm-implying, they are not robustly normative like moral facts. Unlike moral norms and just like e.g. norms of etiquette, there is not necessarily a genuine normative reason to conform to epistemic norms. 5 Step 2: Merely norm-implying domains are not autonomous from science. There is no obstacle to scientific inquiry helping us figure out the content and nature of norms that lack necessary normative authority. The question of what is required or valuable relative to some standard is a non-normative question that can very well be examined empirically. The deflationist reply 1. If epistemology epistemic deflationism is true, then epistemology is not autonomous from science. 2. Epistemic deflationism is true. 3. Therefore, epistemology is not autonomous from science. 4. Deflationism avoids the problems of the engineering reply Deflationism is not committed to epistemic consequentialism. Merely norm-implying domains are not necessarily consequentialist. Norms that lack necessary normative authority can be deontological. Whether an act is, e.g., legal or decorous is not necessarily determined by the consequences of that act. 4 The term norm-relativity is from Hattiangadi (2007). Other labels used in the literature for the same distinction include reason-implying versus mere rule-implying normativity (Parfit, 2011), robust versus merely formal normativity (McPherson, 2011), strong versus weak categoricity (Joyce, 2001), normative requirements versus mere requirements (Broome, 2013), and irreducible versus merely reducible normativity (Olson, 2014). 5 Although this is the minority of epistemic normativity, versions of it can be attributed to Papineau (2013) and Hazlett (2013). See also Grimm s (2009) reading of Sosa (2007). See e.g. Cuneo (2007) and Rowland (2013) for explicit criticisms of that view.

Deflationism is not committed to normative naturalism. Since it does not view epistemic facts as genuinely normative, deflationism is not committed to the controversial claim that natural facts can be genuinely normative. Deflationism accommodates the inescapability of epistemic evaluations. Since it does not view epistemology as robustly normative, deflationism doesn t have to show that epistemic norms are inescapably normative. It only has to show that they inescapably apply to us (even though they are not inescapably reason-giving). Many norms that lack necessary normative authority apply to agents independently of what they care about. Your illegal or indecorous acts, for example, are illegal or indecorous whether or not you care about the law or etiquette. 5. Deflationism can withstand objections Objection 1: deflationism makes epistemology trivial. Reply. All that is needed for a norm N to lack necessary normative authority, is that there can be cases where there is no robust reason to conform to N. But this leaves the possibility that it almost always matters whether you are conforming to N and therefore that N is a very important kind of norm. Objection 2: deflationism cannot accommodate epistemic reasons. Reply. Reasons claims can be read in a merely norm-implying (and not robustly normative) way. Even in the few situations where there is no genuinely normative reason to do as e.g. the law requires, it remains true that there are legal reasons to do so. According to epistemic deflationism, epistemic reasons are just like that: not necessarily robustly normative. 6 Objection 3: deflationism makes epistemology conventional and relative. Reply. Norms can be absolute, universal, and nonconventional without having necessary normative authority. This can be the case if the norms in question are grounded in some fundamental end or standard that is itself absolute and nonconventional (which is how many epistemologists construe the epistemic domain. E.g. as deriving from the fundamental standard of truth or knowledge). Word count (including titles excluding notes and bibliography): 1070 6 For more on the distinction between robust and merely norm-implying reasons, see e.g. Olson (2014).

Works cited (in abstract) Berker, Selim (2013a). Epistemic Teleology and the Separateness of Propositions. Philosophical Review 122 (3):337-393. Berker, Selim (2013b). The Rejection of Epistemic Consequentialism. Philosophical Issues 23 (1):363-387. Broome, John (2013). Rationality Through Reasoning. Wiley-Blackwell. Cuneo, Terence (2007). The Normative Web: An Argument for Moral Realism. Oxford University Press. Firth, Roderick (1981). Epistemic Merit, Intrinsic and Instrumental. Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 55 (1):5-23. Greaves, Hilary (2013). Epistemic Decision Theory. Mind 122 (488):915-952. Grimm, Stephen R. (2009). Epistemic Normativity. In Adrian Haddock, Alan Millar & Duncan Pritchard (eds.), Epistemic Value. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 243-264. Hattiangadi, Anandi (2007). Oughts and Thoughts: Rule-Following and the Normativity of Content. Oxford University Press. Hazlett, Allan (2013). A Luxury of the Understanding: On the Value of True Belief. Oxford University Press. Jenkins, C. (2007). Entitlement and rationality. Synthese 157 (1):25-45. Joyce, Richard (2001). The Myth of Morality. Cambridge University Press. Kim, Jaegwon (1988). What is "naturalized epistemology?". Philosophical Perspectives 2:381-405. Littlejohn, Clayton (2012). Justification and the Truth-Connection. Cambridge University Press. McPherson, Tristram (2011). Against quietist normative realism. Philosophical Studies 154 (2):223-240. Olson, Jonas (2014). Moral Error Theory: History, Critique, Defence. Oxford University Press. Papineau, David (2013). There Are No Norms of Belief. In T. Chan (ed.), The Aim of Belief. Parfit Derek, (2011). On What Matters. Oxford University Press. Quine, W. V. (1969). Epistemology Naturalized. In Ontological Relativity and Other Essays. New York: Columbia University Press.

Rowland, Richard (2013). Moral Error Theory and the Argument from Epistemic Reasons. Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 7 (1):1-24. Sellars, Wilfrid S. (1956). Empiricism and the philosophy of mind. Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science 1:253-329. Siegel, Harvey (1996). Naturalism, Instrumental Rationality and the Normativity of Epistemology. ProtoSociology 8:97-110. Sosa, Ernest (2007). A Virtue Epistemology: Apt Belief and Reflective Knowledge, Volume I. Oxford University Press. Wrenn, Chase (2006). Epistemology as Engineering? Theoria 72 (1):60-79.