Saturday, May 26, 2012
Meaning, Ontology and Anti-Realism Handout
1)
~ ($x) x
is a colored physical object.
2)
($x) x
is a colored physical object.
3)
~ ($x) x
is a chair & x is blue.
4)
There is
a blue chair in the attic.
5)
We don’t
know what we mean when we engage in vernacular utterances like 4).
6)
There are
seven people in the room but only six chairs.
7)
There was
a severe sugar-shortage in Moscow this winter.
8)
Some
shapes (i.e., shape properties) are uninstantiated.
9)
There is
a possibility that James will come.
10) The statement that James will come is not
certainly false.
11) ($x) x
is a possibility.
12) ($x) x
is a sugar-shortage.
13) There is a brown cow in the barn.
14) There is a meaning which can be given to his
remarks.
15) His remarks can be understood in a certain
way.
16) The direction of a is the same as the
direction of b.
17) Line a is parallel to line b.
18) The number of Fs is the same as the number of
Gs.
19) There are just as many Fs as Gs.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Fourth Salvo
Actually,
this is hardly more than a promissory note advertising a book, on which I am
currently dispensing finishing touches, entitled “Greatness of Soul, in Hume,
Aristotle and Hobbes”, featuring a greater and a lesser “missing chapter in the
history of philosophy”.
If the greater of
the two can be seen in retrospect to be already signaled in my previous post by
Hume’s riveting Nietzschean Paragraph, the lesser missing chapter also recalls
my earlier post, by picking up on its theme of straddling, only now a
straddling as between Hume’s Treatise
and his Enquiry Concerning the Principles
of Morals. The issue here turns on
how we are to think in tandem about this passage launching his Paragraph – “The
generality of mankind consider heroism or military glory as the most sublime
kind of merit” when it is juxtaposed with the following in his chapter “Of
benevolence” early in the Enquiry: “The epithets sociable, good-natured, humane, merciful, grateful, friendly,
generous, beneficent, or their equivalents, are known in all languages,
and universally express the highest merit, which human nature is capable of attaining.”
The operative word
in the two passages being “merit”, it is hard if not impossible to square the
most sublime variety of it, according to the generality of mankind, with the
highest kind as expressed universally in all languages by Hume’s seven epithets
or their equivalents. Resolving the
puzzle is the task set by the fifth chapter of my book.
By no means altogether
promissory, this post I take to supply a missing chapter in the history of
philosophy in its own right, simply by focusing attention on this exegetical puzzle in Hume studies, the relevance of which to our
understanding of his theory of personal merit (= ethics) I leave here largely as
an open question. That these two sorts
of merit at least smack of Nietzsche’s distinction between master and slave
morality is not likely to be contested. Or is it?
Location:
Syracuse, NY, USA
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Third Salvo
Contrasting the count noun materialism of our own time with the mass
noun materialism of the early Meilesians, one might suppose that just such
straddling of ancient and modern might come to be a familiar feature in “missing
chapters.” At any rate I dare to scout a
peculiarly unpromising venture along that line if only to indicate early on
how, in pursuing my program, I shall not be content with easy pickings. Flaunting indeed bravado, I aim to project a
modern counterpart of Aristotle’s much maligned great souled man who must not
fail of being quite as problematic as him.
At the same time,
the problematic greatness of mind of this modern counterpart is designed to
invite us to rethink our alienation from Aristotle’s original a salient
characteristic of whom lies in his . . . disdain that Aristotle feels free to
liken to how the vulgar rich throw their weight around in contempt of the rest
of us who are so much less well heeled than they.
Excelling in his
exercise of all the moral virtues, Aristotle’s great souled man’s disdain can
only be said at 1124B 1-5 to be grotesquely aped by the vulgar rich, rather in
the mode of a caricature of him in Aristophanes. Alas, caricatures even in their monstrous
exaggerations can be very revealing of the truth, and one may thus even credit
the many classical scholars of the last century, not least those who were
otherwise fans of the Nicomachean Ethics, for deploring NEIV, 3. Flat-footed enough in its valorization of
folk ethics in the absence of this egregious chapter, which can really be felt
to stand out like the proverbial sore thumb, Aristotle’s doctrine of the mean,
as between too much and too little, hardly squares with a disdain that even
invites parody.
How then explain my
own eagerness to project a modern replay of this highly infelicitous material? Well, no such eagerness ever
crossed my mind. One very external
factor, rather, comes into play, namely the following paragraph very late in
Hume’s Treatise of Human Nature, from a chapter entitled “Of greatness
of mind”.
Heroism, or military glory, is much admired by the
generality of mankind. They consider it
as the most sublime kind of merit. Men
of cool reflection are not so sanguine in their praises of it. The infinite confusions and disorder, which
it has caused in the world, diminish much of its merit in their eyes. When they would oppose the popular notions on
this head, they always paint out the evils, which this supposed virtue has
produced in human society; the subversion of empires, the devastation of
provinces, the sack of cities. As long
as these are present to us, we are more inclined to hate than admire the
ambition of heroes. But when we fix our
view on the person himself, who is the author of all this mischief, there is
something so dazzling in his character, the mere contemplation of it so
elevates the mind, that we cannot refuse it our admiration. The pain, which we receive from its tendency
to the prejudice of society, is over-powered by a stronger and more immediate
sympathy.
So there you have
it, without any coaching from me, a “missing chapter” in the history of ethics,
credited solely to Hume, whereby greatness of mind is found to straddle ancient
and modern thanks to Hume’s rather more candid Nietzschean trope already
anticipated by Aristotle. Equally
committed to providing a philosophic rationale for folk ethics, they are also
at one by jointly disrupting the scheme with a Nietzschean add-on.
Actually, there are
two “missing chapters” in ethics that come into play here, only one of which
features this add-on in Hume and Aristotle alike, with the other, quite novel
“missing chapter” undertaking to combine Aristotle’s ethics with Hume’s sans
the Nietzschean add-on in each of them.
In projecting this novel Humeo-Aristotelian version of folk ethics, it
may be almost enough for me to fixate on how the Greek word kalon,
commonly translated as “noble” or “fine”, which is what Aristotle’s ethics is
all about, goes much more compellingly into “meritorious”, once one registers
the fact that “personal merit” plays precisely the role for Hume that the kalon
plays for Aristotle. But it is not
merely “meritorious” that enriches our grasp of Aristotle’s kalon. There is in Hume something else, though for
this – “what elevates the mind” – we must not hesitate to plunder Hume’s
Nietzschean add-on.
Finally, Hume
supplies a third factor – “disinterested approbation” – that trades on the
distinction between what we desire and what we admire, where the kalon figures
principally as regards the latter, with Aristotle’s akrasia thus kicking
in at long last. Arguably, there is even
a fourth factor – Hume’s even handed treatment of self-regarding vs. other
regarding considerations in his four-fold scheme of personal merit = the kalon,
namely (a) conduct useful to others, (b) conduct useful to oneself, (c) conduct
immediately agreeable to others and (d) conduct immediately agreeable to
oneself, where (d) figures directly in what elevates the mind of the hero while
(c) characterizes our vicarious participation in that elevation by way of
“sympathy”.
This even-handedness
is all the more striking for those who have accessed in Aristotle’s Rhetoric
his extended account of the kalon strongly emphasizing altruism. Not that any such emphasis is evident to
modern readers of the Nicomachean Ethics. To the contrary, we are apt to fault
Aristotle for contaminating what affects to be a rationale for folk ethics with
an excess of self-regardingness.
That the kalon
comes fully into its own very belatedly, only in Hume, I take to be an
astonishing “missing chapter” in the history of ethics. How’s that for straddling ancient and modern!
Labels:
Aristotle,
great souled man,
Hume
Location:
Syracuse, NY, USA
Friday, January 20, 2012
Second Salvo
Fearful of the
near pariah status of history of philosophy in the hard-core precincts of
analytical philosophy today, I hastened in my first salvo to project an almost
futuristic version of it that allows me now to relax a bit in the longuedurée
of the past in which history of philosophy has been widely felt to be most at
home. Going then to the opposite
extreme, it will be not some putative end of philosophy but rather its presumed
beginning of it, in Thales, to which I now turn, meekly following Aristotle in
the first Book of his Metaphysics.
So here at least history of philosophy figures, superbly, as all of
apiece with systematic philosophy as such?
Maybe not, though it can certainly
seem so on a casual reading of his text.
However attractive, in its own right, as a history of philosophy replay
of Aristotle’s discussion of his “four causes” – material, formal, efficient
and final – earlier in his Physics, he is quite explicit as to the
immediate rationale for undertaking this replay, “for we shall either find
another kind of cause, or be more convinced of the correctness of those which
we now maintain” (983B 5). Only more
convinced, thereby allowing even in this case for there being a fifth cause
that continues to elude him? Although
resolving this issue could not fail to supply a missing chapter in the history
of philosophy that lies at any rate beyond those few readily at hand for me
now, I am in rather a position to supply a friendly amendment to Aristotle in
his effort to explain why Thales settled on water as being “that of which all
things consist, the first from which they come to be, the last into which they
are resolved (the substance remaining but changing its modifications)”, 183B
8-9.
Invoking a possible worlds approach
to a pre-Socratic hermeneutics that aims only to secure a more or less close
approximation to what the historical Thales had in mind, conceding of course
that the closest possible world is always the actual world, I cannot but notice
how the most immediately relevant “modifications” of water – liquid, solid and
vapor – fail to feature in Aristotle’s account.
If one’s first thought, still more Aristotle’s first thought, might be
that liquidity, far from being on a par with the “other” modification of water,
smacks rather of being an essential property of it, “smacks” is the word that
alerts us to a puzzle with which I propose to view Thales as having profoundly
struggled but in vain. Well, not in
vain, seeing that a still missing chapter in the history of how philosophy and
science fatefully come to go their separate ways, I take to lie encoded in that
heroic struggle.
Even allowing Thales to be in a
position to distinguish water l from water s and water v, one hesitates to find
him content with Aristotle’s “substance (ousia) remaining but changing
its modifications”, quite as if this ousia were a Lockean “I know not
what”, though once one allows ice and steam or vapor to supply such diverse
Fregean modes of presentation for water, the further inductive leap to the rest
of nature need not fall afoul of familiar hypothetico-deductive canons.
Distinguish now the historical
Thales, whoever he might be, from my own Thales one and Thales two who figure
as Lewisian counterparts in very close possible worlds an implicit struggle
between which turns on how Thales two continues to insist that, as an
especially perspicuous mode of presentation of water simpliciter, water
l must finally be found to trump both water s and water v.
Mere anachronistic mention of Frege
and Lewis should be enough to verify how my own take on Thales is as futuristic
as Aristotle’s, only much more so, at this still greater remove from him. Add the name of Quine, and a still deeper
theme emerges, in connection with ontological commitment. Taking Thales to be ontologically committed
only to . . . water, “(
x) x is water” strikes one as a highly jejune formulation of his
position in Quine’s canonical notation of first-order predicate logic if only
because “(
x) x = water & (
y) y = x” is no less acceptable, albeit appealing now to an enhanced
first-order predicate logic with identity in which Quine is still more at home.
If this distinction between predicate
logic with and without identity will doubtless be felt to be surely at least
one technical nuance too many, at any rate by those of my fans who are rooting
above all for a reactivated history of philosophy, it is precisely Quine and
his commitment to philosophy “from a logical point of view” on whom I am
principally relying in undertaking that very reactivation. A two-way street, however, in my juxtaposing,
incongruously, Thales and Quine, I venture to shed almost as much light on the
latter as I do on the former, starting with his focusing “on what there is”
from a logical point of view. A putative
counter-example to Quine’s purportedly neutral – as regards competing
ontologies – first-order scheme that implicitly provides only for count nouns,
the early philosophers plumped for mass nouns, water for Thales, air for
Anaximander and fire for Heraclitus.
As to whether Quine would allow for
a purely aqueous ontology or proto-ontology according to which “all there is is
water and only water”, I believe he would refer us to his doctrine of
“indeterminacy of radical translation”, insisting only that a Whigish approach that takes Thales’ mass noun quasi-ontology to be
applauded as baby steps on the way to a proper count noun ontology would register
for him as among his less favored translations.
As to whether Williamson would stick
in this context to his epistemic theory of vagueness I am much less confident.
Finally, pressing into further
service Davidson’s doctrine of “charity” as a talisman for dispelling Quinean
indeterminacy, no less than five major figures in analytical philosophy have
been called upon to discharge this “missing chapter” on poor old Thales. How absurd now, my worries about an impending
end of philosophy, when these five almost equally riveting figures pass before
us in review!
Location:
Syracuse, NY, USA
Thursday, January 12, 2012
First Salvo
Focusing at the
outset on their immediate bearing, my program comes now to be launched by a
hitherto missing chapter – featuring a three-fold “incredulous stare” extending
beyond David Lewis to Graham Priest and Timothy Williamson – that could hardly
be closer to home. So much closer in
fact that, far from harking back to what we conventionally call “history of
philosophy”, this incredulous stare on steroids might well be felt to challenge
us with hot off the press “philosophy proper”, sticking with the convention.
With the original
incredulous stare seen to be addressed to Lewis’s modal realism, it must surely
be elicited at least as much by Priest’s insistence that the Liar Paradox
succeeds in delivering a sentence that is at once true and false. Ditto for Williamson’s insistence that,
absent a single penny, a rich man can cease to qualify as rich. Even without any precipitous decline in the
nation’s currency.
As to whether we
might combine our three philosophers into something more than a mere potpourri,
distinguish between the varying extension of “rich” in all relevant worlds and
its constant intension pegged to its single-penny sharp line dividing non-rich from
rich. Although Lewis insists,
tendentiously, on singling out our world as the only “actual” one, anyway
relative to us, this proves to be hardly more than a verbal distraction when
elucidating how Humphrey would have won the presidential election over Nixon,
by calling him out for his behind-the-scenes, illegal approaches to the Viet
Cong. Relying on “Actuality entails
possibility” as the only substantive, uncontroversial principle of modality, a
very real duplicate of Humphrey but for the fact that he really does call out a
duplicate Nixon for approaching a duplicate Viet Cong, in a world the laws of
nature of which duplicate our own, Lewis does succeed in providing plausible
truth conditions for this “would have”.
Even Quine, despite his famous misgivings over modality, might concede
as much, even while protesting that in the absence of any independent, robust
evidence for the “actual”, temporally as well as spatially disconnected
existence of these duplicates. Lewis’s
rationale for contrary-to-fact modality must wither in
the face of . . . an incredulous stare.
That an omnibus
three fold version of this stare threatens to undermine the logico-linguistic
core of analytical philosophy itself, only goes to show how, even now, we might
understand what it would be like for someone to be actively engaged in writing
a first draft of “The Last Chapter in the history of philosophy”. In a quite personal vein, let me just add
that I should be very surprised to learn that I have written this first
draft. To the contrary, I look forward
to fighting in the trenches, keeping that outcome at bay.
Labels:
Incredulous Stare,
Lewis,
Priest,
Williamson
Location:
Syracuse, NY, USA
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