I think Eliezer is generally right that reading too much mainstream philosophy — even “naturalistic” analytic philosophy — is somewhat likely to “teach very bad habits of thought that will lead people to be unable to do real work.”
Also could you expand on this as I didn’t catch it before the edit?
It’s not obvious what the “bad habits” might be, and what they are bad relative to. This reads as a claim that would be very hard to defend at face value, and without clarification it reads like a throwaway attack not to be taken seriously.
It’s not obvious what the “bad habits” might be, and what they are bad relative to.
Examples of bad habits often picked up from reading too much philosophy: arguing endlessly about definitions, or using one’s own intuitions as strong evidence about how the external world works. These are bad habits relative to, you know, not arguing endlessly about definitions, and using science to figure out how the world works.
Is the problem the arguing, or the arguing endlessly? In science, there is little need to argue about definitions because Someone Somewhere has settled the issue, often by stipulation. In philosophy, there is no Someone Somewhere who convenientyl does this for you. Philosophy deals with non-empirical questions (or it would be science), which means it deals with concepts, and since we access concepts with words, it deals with definitions. So the criticism that philosophers shouldn’t argue definitions is tantamount to criticising philosophy for being philosophy. Uless the problem was the “endlessly”.
using one’s own intuitions as strong evidence about how the external world works.
Who does that? (ETA: at least for the past one hundred years) None of your examples work that way. Questions like “what is knowledge” and “what is the right thing to do” are not about the EW.
The problem is “arguing” as compared to “investigating”.
If there’s a disagreement about how human minds implement certain ideas, then it’s more productive to do experimental psychology than to discuss it abstractly, for the usual scientific reasons: nailing it down to a prediction makes sure that the idea in question is actually coherent, and also there are a lot of potential pitfalls when humans try to use their own brains to examine their own brains.
Though on the other hand, coming up with good experiments for this stuff is really tricky. As Suryc mentions above, you can’t just ask people what they mean by “intentional” or whatever, you’ll get garbage results. Just like how if you ask somebody with no linguistics knowledge to explain English grammar to you you’ll get nonsense back, even if that person is quite capable at actually writing in English.
Also: Who says that concepts are non-empirical? Doesn’t it come down to something like a scientific investigation into the operations of the human brain?
arguing endlessly about definitions, or using one’s own intuitions as strong evidence about how the external world works.
So this comes down to what you said previously about not liking people who came out of Philosophy 101, e.g., it’s an argument against a philosophical tradition that does not actually exist.
These are bad habits relative to, you know, not arguing endlessly about definitions, and using science to figure out how the world works.
You mention naturalism as a “bad habit” for using science to understand the world?
Do you actually understand what naturalism is and what relationship it has with science?
You mention naturalism as a “bad habit” for using science to understand the world?
No, he doesn’t (which is why I downvoted this comment, BTW). Luke says that even naturalistic philosophers exhibit these bad habits. He does not say that naturalism is a bad habit, or that it’s a bad habit because it uses science to understand the world.
Luke says that even naturalistic philosophers exhibit these bad habits. He does not say that naturalism is a bad habit, or that it’s a bad habit because it uses science to understand the world.
Not quite:
reading too much mainstream philosophy … is somewhat likely to “teach very bad habits of thought that will lead people to be unable to do real work.”
“Teach” implies that engaging one’s self with “too much” mainstream philosophy will cause bad habits to arise (and make one unable to do ‘real work’, whatever that might be).
Unexamined presuppositions make a wonderful basis for discourse.
I don’t think that’s what lukeprog meant. That said, thinking ‘naturalism’ is a unitary concept that the members of some relevant linguistic community or intellectual elite share is itself a startlingly good example of the sort of practice lukeprog’s ‘intuitions aren’t shared’ meme is warning about.
The Stanford Encyclopedia article on naturalism itself begins, amusingly enough:
“The term ‘naturalism’ has no very precise meaning in contemporary philosophy. [...‘N]aturalism’ is not a particularly informative term as applied to contemporary philosophers. The great majority of contemporary philosophers would happily accept naturalism[...]—that is, they would both reject ‘supernatural’ entities, and allow that science is a possible route (if not necessarily the only one) to important truths about the ‘human spirit’.
Even so, this entry will not aim to pin down any more informative definition of ‘naturalism’. It would be fruitless to try to adjudicate some official way of understanding the term. Different contemporary philosophers interpret ‘naturalism’ differently. This disagreement about usage is no accident. For better or worse, ‘naturalism’ is widely viewed as a positive term in philosophical circles—few active philosophers nowadays are happy to announce themselves as ‘non-naturalists’. This inevitably leads to a divergence in understanding the requirements of ‘naturalism’. Those philosophers with relatively weak naturalist commitments are inclined to understand ‘naturalism’ in a unrestrictive way, in order not to disqualify themselves as ‘naturalists’, while those who uphold stronger naturalist doctrines are happy to set the bar for ‘naturalism’ higher.”
Thinking ‘naturalism’ is a unitary concept that the members of some relevant linguistic community or intellectual elite share is itself a startlingly good example of the ‘intuitions aren’t shared’ corrective lukeprog was making.
But calling it a “bad habit” with no justification or qualification is exempt from being an equally good (better, in fact, given that I’d not at all expanded on naturalism and certainly not with a dismissive one-liner) example of the “corrective”?
PS—the Stanford Encyclopedia is as good a “proof” as posting a link from Wikipedia. There is (of course) debate in philosophy, but to claim that “naturalism” encourages “bad habits” is just plain sloppy thinking and a strawman built against equally sloppy philosophy undergrads.
If intuitions aren’t reliable, then this entire line of thought is unreliable :-)
To be frank, although I speak for myself and not lukeprog, framing the scientific method or world-view in terms of ‘naturalism,’ or in terms of a nature/‘supernature’ dichotomy, is a bad habit. I can’t say much more than that until you explain what you personally mean by ‘naturalism.’
the Stanford Encyclopedia is as good a “proof” as posting a link from Wikipedia.
I don’t follow. A Stanford Encyclopedia is much better evidence for the professional consensus of philosophers than is a Wikipedia article.
If intuitions aren’t reliable, then this entire line of thought is unreliable :-)
Are you alluding to the fact that we all rely on intuitions in our everyday reason? If so, this is an important point. The take-away message from philosophy’s excesses is not ‘Avoid all intuitions.’ It’s ‘Scrutinize intuitions to determine which ones we have reason to expect to match the contours of the territory.’ The successes of philosophy—successes like ‘science’ and ‘mathematics’ and ‘logic’—are formalized and heavily scrutinized networks of intuitions, intuitions that we have good empirical reason to think happen to be of a rare sort that correspond to the large-scale structure of reality. Most of our intuitions aren’t like that, though they may still be useful and interesting in other respects.
To be frank, although I speak for myself and not lukeprog, framing the scientific method or world-view in terms of ‘naturalism,’ or in terms of a nature/‘supernature’ dichotomy, is a bad habit. I can’t say much more than that until you explain what you personally mean by ‘naturalism.’
I’m thinking of naturalism as broadly accepted by modern analytic philosophy, in Quine’s terms and in more modern constructions which emphasize i) that the natural world is the “only” world (this is not to be confused with a dualistic opposition to anything “supernatural”; the supernatural is simply ruled out as an option) and ii) that science is a preferred means of obtaining knowledge about said world.
I realize that’s less clear than you may want, but the vagueness of the term is part of why I found it objectionable to treat is as instilling “bad habits”.
Are you alluding to the fact that we all rely on intuitions in our everyday reason?
Well, indirectly, but the specific point was that the argument presented here is an intuition about what goes on in philosophy, what constitutes the current trends and debates within the discipline, and so on, and it appears to me that it is more strawman than a rigorous reply to those activities.
Given that it’s an intuition underpinning an article about the unreliability of intuitions, well...you can appreciate the meta-humor I found there.
It’s ‘Scrutinize intuitions to determine which ones we have reason to expect to match the contours of the territory.’
Of course, and as I’ve relayed in other comments, this is no insight to philosophers—philosophers already do this. We could of course point out instances where the philosopher’s argument is predicated on validating intutions, but even there you are guaranteed to see a more nuanced position than the uncritical acceptance of common-sense intuitions, and as such even those positions mandate more than a sweeping dismissal.
The successes of philosophy—successes like ‘science’ and ‘mathematics’ and ‘logic’—are formalized and heavily scrutinized networks of intuitions, intuitions that we have good empirical reason to think happen to be of a rare sort that correspond to the large-scale structure of reality.
And ethics/meta-ethics, moral theory, social theory, aesthetics...all of these are, at least in part, beyond the realm of the empirical, and it is a philosophical stance you have taken which puts them in the realm of the physical and empirical or else excludes their reality (if you go the eliminativist route).
These domains are arguably as successful at what they do as math and logic have been in their respective domains, and frankly they don’t operate anything like what you’ve described (re: empirically-discovered relations to the large scale of reality). This is part of why we need naturalistic philosophy, because without it you wind up with unabashed scientism like this, which sits right on the precipice of “ethical” choices which can be monstrous.
Personally I think even other forms of philosophy are not only useful, but what have been called “bad habits” by Eliezer et al. are actually central components of a lived human life. I wouldn’t be so hasty to get rid of them, and certainly not with such a sweeping set of dismissals about the primacy of science.
Define “natural world” so that it’s clearer how the above is non-tautological.
(this is not to be confused with a dualistic opposition to anything “supernatural”;
If you aren’t denying or opposing anything, then what work is “only” doing in the sense “the natural world is the only world”?
the supernatural is simply ruled out as an option)
What does it mean in this context to ‘rule out as an option’ something? How does this differ from ‘opposing’ an option?
and ii) that science is a preferred means of obtaining knowledge about said world.
Define ‘science,’ while you’re at it. Is looking out the window science? Is logical deduction science? Is logical deduction science when your premises are ‘about the world’? Same question for mathematical reasoning. I’d think most scientists in their daily lives would actually consider logical or mathematical reasoning stronger than, ‘preferred’ over, any scientific observation or theory.
I realize that’s less clear than you may want, but the vagueness of the term is part of why I found it objectionable to treat is as instilling “bad habits”.
The vagueness of the term ‘naturalism’ is the primary reason it’s a bad habit to define your methods or world-view in terms of it.
And ethics/meta-ethics, moral theory, social theory, aesthetics...all of these are, at least in part, beyond the realm of the empirical
I don’t know what you mean by ‘beyond the realm of the empirical.’ Plenty of logic and mathematics also transcends the observable. I think we’d get a lot further in this discussion if we started defining or tabooing ‘science,’ ‘philosophy,’ ‘empirical,’ ‘natural,’ etc.
This is part of why we need naturalistic philosophy, because without it you wind up with unabashed scientism like this, which sits right on the precipice of “ethical” choices which can be monstrous.
To be honest, this sentence here pretty much sums up what I think is wrong with modern philosophy. There is virtually no content to ‘naturalism’ or ‘scientism,’ beyond the fact that both are associated with science and the former has a positive connotation, while the latter has a negative connotation. Thus we see much of the modern philosophical (and pop-philosophical) discourse consumed in hand-wringing over whether something is ‘naturalistic’ (goodscience! happy face!) or whether something is ‘scientistic’ (badscience! frowny face!), and the whole framing does nothing but obscure what’s actually under debate. Any non-trivial definition of ‘naturalism’ and ‘scientism’ will allow that a reasonable scientist might be forced to forsake naturalism, or adopt scientism, in at least some circumstances; and any circular or otherwise trivial one is not worth discussing.
If you aren’t denying or opposing anything, then what work is “only” doing in the sense “the natural world is the only world”?
In that there is “no more than”, in ontological terms, there are no other fundamental categories of being. I don’t have to explicitly deny that unicorns exist in order to rule them out of any taxonomy of equine animals.
If you’ve presupposed a worldview that allows for “supernatural” or “mystical” or Cartesian mind-substance or what have you, then of course the opposition seems obvious, but modern analytical naturalism as it stands makes no such allowance. This is why we cannot take our presuppositions for granted.
Define ‘science,’ while you’re at it.
You don’t have the space on this forum for that debate. However, for pragmatic purposes, let’s (roughly) call it the social activity of institutionalized formal empirical inquiry, inclusive of the error-correcting norms and structures meant to filter our systematic errors.
The vagueness of the term ‘naturalism’ is the primary reason it’s a bad habit to define your methods or world-view in terms of it.
Maybe if you didn’t take flippant comments and run with them you wouldn’t encounter this problem. I brought up naturalism because I found it hilarious that “even modern analytic philosophy” teaches these laughably vague “bad habits”—which you still seem surprisingly unconcerned with, given the far more serious issues there—and contemporary naturalism as practiced by many philosophers in the English-speaking world is as pro-science a set of ideas as you’ll find.
Spiraling it out into this protracted debate about whether we can accurately define naturalism—on your terms, no less—is not the point of the exercise (and I suspect it’s only happened to take the focus off the matter at hand: that there is no adequate account of these “bad habits” and we’re seeing an interference play to keep eyes off it).
There is virtually no content to ‘naturalism’ or ‘scientism,’ beyond the fact that both are associated with science and the former has a positive connotation, while the latter has a negative connotation.
Yes I’m well aware of the dislike of anything intrinsically opposed to the formal and computable around these parts, and I also find that position to be laughable (and a shining example of why you folks need to engage with philosophy rather than jumping head-first into troubling [and equally laughable] moral-ethical positions).
But, as per the thread, there is a more interesting and proximate criticism: your intuitions on such are unreliable, by your own lights, so you’ll pardon me if I am hardly persuaded by your fiat declaration that i) there is “no content” to a whole wide-ranging debate (of which you seem barely familiar with, at that, with your introduction of yet another nonsensical opposition that might as well be fiction for all it reflects the actual process*) and ii) that we should—again by decree—paint as “useless” the tools and methods used to engage in the debate.
We are only fortunate that the actual intellectual world doesn’t conduct itself like a message board.
PS There is no serious debate “between” naturalism and scientism. The latter isn’t even a “position” as such, even less so than naturalism could be.
So this comes down to what you said previously about not liking people who came out of Philosophy 101, e.g., it’s an argument against a philosophical tradition that does not actually exist.
No. It’s an argument against a philosophical tradition that does exist.
In this “Philosophy by Humans” sub-sequence, it seems like the most common response I get is, “No, philosophers can’t actually be that stupid,” even though my post went to the trouble of quoting philosophers saying “Yes, this thing here is our standard practice.”
I’ll say it again: by “intuition” they might mean “shared intuition”, in which case they are doing nothing wrong so long as there are some, and so long as they rejected purported intuitions which aren’t shared.
In this “Philosophy by Humans” sub-sequence, it seems like the most common response I get is, “No, philosophers can’t actually be that stupid,” even though my post went to the trouble of quoting philosophers saying “Yes, this thing here is our standard practice.”
So? I can quote scientists saying all manner of stupid, bizarre, unintuitive things...but my selection of course sets up the terms of the discussion. If I choose a sampling that only confirms my existing bias against scientists, then my “quotes” are going to lead to the foregone conclusion. I don’t see why “quoting” a few names is considered evidence of anything besides a pre-existing bias against philosophy.
On a second and more important point, you’ve yet to elaborate on why having a debate about ethics is problematic in the first place. Your appeal to Eliezer and his vague handwaving about “bad habits” and “real work” (which range from “too vague” to “nonsensical” depending on how charitable you want to be) is not persuasive, so I’d ask again: what is wrong with philosophy doing what it is supposed to do, i.e., examine ideas?
I realize that declaring it “wrong” by fiat seems to be the rule around here, if the comments are any indication, but from the philosophical standpoint that’s a laughable argument to make, and it’s not persuasive to anyone who doesn’t already share your presuppositions.
If I choose a sampling that only confirms my existing bias against scientists, then my “quotes” are going to lead to the foregone conclusion. I don’t see why “quoting” a few names is considered evidence of anything besides a pre-existing bias against philosophy.
So you’re worried about the problem of filtered evidence. Throughout this sequence, I’ve given lots of citations and direct quotes of philosophers doing things — and saying that they’re doing things — which don’t make sense given certain pieces of scientific evidence. Can you, then, provide citations or quotes of philosophers saying “No, we aren’t really appealing to intuitions in this way?” I’ll bet you can find a few, but I don’t think they’ll say that their own approach is the standard one.
You’re asking me to do all the work, here. I’ve provided examples and evidence, and you’ve just flatly denied my examples and evidence without providing any counterexamples or counterevidence. That’s logically rude.
you’ve yet to elaborate on why having a debate about ethics is problematic in the first place… what is wrong with philosophy doing what it is supposed to do, i.e., examine ideas?
Here, you managed to straw man me twice in a single paragraph. I never said that debates about ethics are problematic, and I never said there’s something wrong with philosophy examining ideas. I’ve only ever said that specific, particular ways of examining ideas or having philosophical debates are problematic, and I’ve explained in detail why those specific, particular methods are problematic. You’re just ignoring what I’ve actually said, and what I have not said.
I realize that declaring it “wrong” by fiat seems to be the rule around here, if the comments are any indication, but from the philosophical standpoint that’s a laughable argument to make, and it’s not persuasive to anyone who doesn’t already share your presuppositions.
Again, I’m the one who bothered to provide examples and evidence for my position. You’re the one who keeps declaring things wrong without providing any examples and evidence to support your own view. Declaring something wrong without providing reason or evidence is against the cultural norm around here, and you are the one who is violating it.
You’re asking me to do all the work, here. I’ve provided examples and evidence, and you’ve just flatly denied my examples and evidence without providing any counterexamples or counterevidence.
All I’ve asked you to do is at least pretend you have some familiarity with the field’s content, and how that content relates to its raison d’etre. As before, I don’t have to provide “counterevidence” that science doesn’t take luminiferous ether seriously as a hypothesis; anyone familiar with the field would already know this.
I never said that debates about ethics are problematic, and I never said there’s something wrong with philosophy examining ideas.
Of course you didn’t say it, because that would be stupid, but it’s implicit in the points you’ve repeatedly made, viz. “philosophers are stupid, if they only paid attention to science....” Well, they do pay attention to science, in fact there is a whole realm of philosophers who pay attention to science and make that a centerpiece of their discussion, and that given philosophy’s purpose as “engagement with ideas” it is implicit that, wonder of wonders, some philosophers will take positions that disagree with the claim you’ve put forth.
That latter statement is the issue, as you said in your article that, since some philosophers accept intuitions as valid (a claim you never bothered to unpack or examine in any detail), therefore we should consider philosophy a primitive and useless artifact of Cartesian thinking.
You’ve taken it for granted without outright saying it. Maybe if you read more philosophy you wouldn’t make these kinds of errors.
Again, I’m the one who bothered to provide examples and evidence for my position. You’re the one who keeps declaring things wrong without providing any examples and evidence to support your own view. Declaring something wrong without providing reason or evidence is against the cultural norm around here, and you are the one who is violating it.
I see, so the cultural norm is to take unfavorable samples of a field you don’t like, present them as exemplars, used them as grounds to justify a giant-sized strawman against said field, complain when people don’t accept that position without criticism, and then hide behind conveniently linked rules meant to fortify your pre-existing groupthink.
Sounds far more rational than every other web forum ever.
To expand on your point, philosophers like Thomas Kuhn and Paul Feyerabend provide a vision of what sophisticated modern philosophy can do to improve the scientist’s perspective.
Sounds far more rational than every other web forum ever.
It’s so much fun to write that. Still, please don’t. Your point is well made in the previous paragraph—this sentence only detracts from your persuasiveness.
All I’ve asked you to do is at least pretend you have some familiarity with the field’s content, and how that content relates to its raison d’etre.
I don’t understand. Certainly, I’m at least “pretending” to have “some familiarity” with the field’s content, and how that content relates to its raison d’etre, by way of citing hundreds of works in the field, quoting philosophers, hosting a podcast for which I interviewed dozens of philosophers for hours on end, etc.
it’s implicit in the points you’ve repeatedly made, viz. “philosophers are stupid, if they only paid attention to science....” Well, they do pay attention to science, in fact there is a whole realm of philosophers who pay attention to science and make that a centerpiece of their discussion
Of course many philosophers pay attention to science. When Eliezer wrote, “If there’s any centralized repository of reductionist-grade naturalistic cognitive philosophy, I’ve never heard mention of it,” I replied (earlier in this sequence):
When I read that I thought: What? That’s Quinean naturalism! That’s Kornblith and Stich and Bickle and the Churchlands and Thagard and Metzinger and Northoff! There are hundreds of philosophers who do that!
Again: you’re straw-manning me. I’ve said specific things about the ways in which many philosophers are ignoring scientific results, but I’m quite aware that they pay attention to other parts of science, and of course that many of them (e.g. the experimental philosophers) pay attention to the kinds of evidence that I’m accusing others of ignoring.
you said in your article that, since some philosophers accept intuitions as valid… therefore we should consider philosophy an artifact of Cartesian thinking.
Straw man number… 5? 6? I’ve lost count. Where did I say that?
You’ve taken it for granted without outright saying it.
Wait, first you claim that “you said in your article that...” and in the very next paragraph you claim that I’ve “taken it for granted without outright saying it”? I’m very confused.
I see, so the cultural norm is to take unfavorable samples of a field you don’t like, present them as exemplars, complain when people don’t accept that position without criticism, and then hide behind rules meant to fortify your pre-existing groupthink.
No. I complain when I do all the work of presenting arguments, examples, and evidence, and you simply deny it all without presenting any arguments, examples, and evidence of your own.
Certainly, I’m at least “pretending” to have “some familiarity” with the field’s content, and how that content relates to its raison d’etre, by way of citing hundreds of works in the field, quoting philosophers, hosting a podcast for which I interviewed dozens of philosophers for hours on end, etc.
You’d think if this were the case you’d be able to make a more honest assessment of the field.
I’ve said specific things about the ways in which many philosophers are ignoring scientific results, but I’m quite aware that they pay attention to other parts of science, and of course that many of them (e.g. the experimental philosophers) pay attention to the kinds of evidence that I’m accusing others of ignoring.
Alright, I’ll grant you this. You’ve still made the point that the field of philosophy has not acknowledged the unreliability of intuitions, as if this were a novel insight and not something that is taken very seriously in the modern-day (at least) debates, and that this is a fundamental flaw in the discipline itself.
Where did I say that?
Right here:
What would happen if we dropped all philosophical methods that were developed when we had a Cartesian view of the mind and of reason, and instead invented philosophy anew given what we now know about the physical processes that produce human reasoning?
The implication being that Cartesian views of mind and reason are in any way relevant to modern philosophy. This isn’t even true for Continental philosophy and hasn’t been for a long time.
Wait, first you claim that “you said in your article that...” and in the very next paragraph you claim that I’ve “taken it for granted without outright saying it”? I’m very confused.
I agree, you are, so let’s slow down and look at my actual criticism again.
What you wrote was that philosophers accept intutions at face value, uncritically...which isn’t true, and I responded accordingly.
What you implied, in that it follows necessarily from your explicitly-made argument, is that since some philosophers accept intutions as valid, therefore the discipline-as-a-whole is broken. But that isn’t true; the entire point is to discuss disparate, conflicting, and even dubious ideas; this is no blackmark as you’ve construed it.
No. I complain when I do all the work of presenting arguments, examples, and evidence, and you simply deny it all without presenting any arguments, examples, and evidence of your own.
A convenient way to hide behind your biases, I suppose, but I’m not sure what it accomplishes otherwise. Even the Stanford Encyclopedia’s entries on moral theory and ethics don’t back up your “unique” assessment of the field.
I don’t think this is going anywhere useful. You’re still straw-manning me and failing to provide exact counterexamples and counter-evidence. I’m moving on to more productive activities.
So? I can quote scientists saying all manner of stupid, bizarre, unintuitive things...but my selection of course sets up the terms of the discussion. If I choose a sampling that only confirms my existing bias against scientists, then my “quotes” are going to lead to the foregone conclusion. I don’t see why “quoting” a few names is considered evidence of anything besides a pre-existing bias against philosophy.
Improving upon this: why care about what the worst of a field has to say? It’s the 10% (stergeon’s law) that aren’t crap that we should care about. The best material scientists give us incremental improvements in our materials technology, and the worst write papers that are never read or do research that is never used. But what do the best philosophers of meta-ethics give us? More well examined ideas? How would you measure such a thing? How can those best philosophers know they’re making progress? How can they improve the tools they use? Why should we fund philosophy departments?
The best ethical philosophers give us the foundations of utility calculation, clarify when we can (and can’t) derive facts and values from each other, generate heuristics and frameworks within which to do politics and resolve disputes over goals and priorities. The best metaphysicians give us scientific reasoning, novel interpretations of quantum mechanics, warnings of scientists becoming overreliant on some component of common sense, and new empirical research programs (Einstein’s most important work consisted of metaphysical thought experiments). The best logicians and linguistic philosophers give us the propositional calculus, knowledge of valid and invalid forms, etc., etc. Even if you think the modalists and dialetheists are crazy, you can be very thankful to them for developing modal and paraconsistent logics that have valuable applications outside of traditional philosophical disputes.
And, of course, philosophy in general is useful for testing the tools of our trade. We can be more confident of and skilled in our reasoning in specific domains, like physics and electrical engineering and differential calculus, when those tools have been put to the test in foundational disputes. A bad Philosophy 101 class can lead to hyperskepticism or metaphysical dogmatism, but a good Philosophy 101 class can lead to a healthy skepticism mixed with intellectual curiosity and dynamism. Ultimately, the reason to fund ‘philosophy’ departments is that there is no such thing as ‘philosophy;’ what the departments in question are really teaching is how to think carefully about the most difficult questions. The actual questions have nothing especially in common, beyond their difficulty, their intractability before our ordinary methods.
I’m a bit worried that your conception of philosophy is riding on the coat tails of long-past-philosophy where the distinction between philosophy, math, and science were much more blurred than they are now. Being generous, do you have any examples from the last few decades (that I can read about)?
I’ll agree with you that having some philosophical training is better than none in that it can be useful in getting a solid footing in basic critical thinking skills, but then if that’s a philosophy department’s purpose then it doesn’t need to be funded beyond that.
Could you taboo/define ‘philosophy,’ ‘math,’ and ‘science’ for me in a way that clarifies exactly how they don’t overlap? It’d be very helpful. Is there any principled reason, for example, that theoretical physics cannot be philosophy? Or is some theoretical physics philosophy, and some not? Is there a sharp line, or a continuum between the two kinds of theoretical physics?
if that’s a philosophy department’s purpose then it doesn’t need to be funded beyond that.
If that’s a philosophy department’s purpose, and nothing else can fulfill the same purpose, then philosophy departments are vastly underfunded as it stands. (Though I agree the current funding could be better managed.)
But the real flaw is that we think of philosophy as a college thing. Philosophical training should be fully integrated into quite early-age education in logical, scientific, mathematical, moral, and other forms of reasoning.
I didn’t say they don’t overlap. I said the distinctions have become less blurred (I think because of the need for increased specialization in all intellectual endeavours as we accumulate more knowledge). I define philosophy, math, and science by their professions. That is, their university departments, their journals, their majors, their textbooks, and so on.
Hence, I think the best way to ask if “philosophy” is a worthwhile endeavour is to asked “why should we fund philosophy departments?” A better way to ask that question is “why should we fund philosophy research and professional philosophers (as opposed to teachers of basic philosophy)?”
And though while I think basic philosophy can be helpful in getting a footing in critical thinking, I also think CFAR is considerably better at teaching critical thinking.
I don’t see any principled reason for why we can’t all be generalists without labels. Practical reasons, yes.
I thought you were saying that the distinctions have become less blurred? Now I’m confused.
I define philosophy, math, and science by their professions.
That’s fine for some everyday purposes. But if we want to distinguish the useful behaviors in each profession from the useless ones, and promote the best behaviors both among laypeople and among professionals, we need more fine-grained categories than just ‘everything that people who publish in journals seen as philosophy journals do.’ I think it would be useful to distinguish Professional Philosophy, Professional Science, and Professional Mathematics from the basic human practices of philosophizing, doing science, or reasoning mathematically. Something in the neighborhood of these ideas would be quite useful:
mathematics: carefully and systematically reasoning about quantity, or (more loosely) about the quantitative properties and relationships of things.
philosophy: carefully reasoning about generalizations, via ‘internal’ reflection (phenomenology, thought experiments, conceptual analysis, etc.), in a moderately (more than shamanic storytelling, less than math or logic) systematic way.
science: carefully collecting empirical data, and carefully reasoning about its predictive and transparently ontological significance.
Do you think these would be useful fast-and-ready definitions for everyday promotion of scientific, philosophical, and mathematical literacy? Would you modify any of them?
I thought you were saying that the distinctions have become less blurred?
Yup, my bad. You caught me before my edit.
Do you think these would be useful fast-and-ready definitions for everyday promotion of scientific, philosophical, and mathematical literacy? Would you modify any of them?
I think you’re reifying abstraction and doing so will introduce pitfalls when discussing them. Math, science, and philosophy are the abstracted output of their respective professions. If you take away science’s competitive incentive structure or change its mechanism of output (journal articles) then you’re modifying science. If you install a self-improving recursive feedback cycle with reality in philosophy, then I think you’ve recreated math and science within philosophy (because science is fundamentally concrete reasoning while math is abstract reasoning and philosophy carries both).
If I’m going to promote something to laypeople, it’s that a mechanism of recursive self-improvement is desirable. There’s plenty to unpack there, though. Like you need a measure of improvement that contacts reality.
I think you’re reifying abstraction and doing so will introduce pitfalls when discussing them.
I think your definitions are more abstract than mine. For me, mathematics, philosophy, and science are embodied brain behaviors — modes of reasoning. For you, if I’m understanding you right, they’re professions, institutions, social groups, population-wide behaviors. Sociology is generally considered more abstract or high-level than psychology.
(Of course, I don’t reject your definitions on that account; denying the existence of philosophizing or of professional philosophy because one or the other is ‘abstract’ would be as silly as denying the existence of abstractions like debt, difficulty, truth, or natural selection. I just think your abstraction is of somewhat more limited utility than mine, when our goal is to spread good philosophizing, science, and mathematics rather than to treat the good qualities of those disciplines as the special property of a prestigious intellectual elite belonging to a specific network of organizations.)
Feedback cycles are great, but we don’t need to build them into our definition of ‘science’ in order to praise science for happening to possess them; if we put each scientist on a separate island, their work might suffer as a result, but it’s not clear to me that they would lose all ability to do anything scientific, or that we should fail to clearly distinguish the scientifically-minded desert-islander for his unusual behaviors.
Also, it’s not clear in what sense mathematics has a self-improving recursive feedback cycle with reality. Actually, mathematics and philosophy seem to function very analogously in terms of their relationship to reality and to science.
If I’m going to promote something to laypeople, it’s that a mechanism of recursive self-improvement is desirable.
I’m not sure that’s the best approach. Telling people to find a recursively self-improving method is not likely to be as effective as giving them concrete reasoning skills (like how to perform thought experiments, or how to devise empirical hypotheses, or how to multiply quantities) and then letting intelligent society-wide behaviors emerge via the marketplace of ideas (or via top-down societal structuring, if necessary). Don’t fixate first and foremost on telling people about what our abstract models suggest makes science on a societal scale so effective; fixate first and foremost on making them good scientists in their daily lives, in every concrete action.
For you, if I’m understanding you right, they’re professions, institutions, social groups, population-wide behaviors. Sociology is generally considered more abstract or high-level than psychology.
You’re kind of understanding me. Abstractly, bee hives produce honey. Concretely, this bee hive in front of me is producing honey. Abstractly, science is the product of professions, institutions, ect. Concretely, science is the product of people on our planet doing stuff.
I’m literally trying to not talk about abstractions or concepts but science as it actually is. And of course, science as it actually is does things that we can then categorize into abstractions like feedback cycles. But when you say science is a bunch of abstractions (like I think your definitions are), then you’re missing out on what it actually is.
Feedback cycles are great, but we don’t need to build them into our definition of ‘science’ in order to praise science for happening to possess them; if we put each scientist on a separate island, their work might suffer as a result, but it’s not clear to me that they would lose all ability to do anything scientific, or that we should fail to clearly distinguish the scientifically-minded desert-islander for his unusual behaviors.
This is exactly why I want to avoid defining science with abstractions. It literally does not make sense if you think of science as it is. “Scientific” imports essentialism.
Also, it’s not clear in what sense mathematics has a self-improving recursive feedback cycle with reality.
Mathematics is self-improving while at the same time hinging on reality. This is tricky to explain so I might come back to it tomorrow when I’m more well rested (i.e., not drunk).
I’m not sure that’s the best approach. Telling people to find a recursively self-improving method is not likely to be as effective as giving them concrete reasoning skills (like how to perform thought experiments, or how to devise empirical hypotheses, or how to multiply quantities) and then letting intelligent society-wide behaviors emerge via the marketplace of ideas (or via top-down societal structuring, if necessary). Don’t fixate first and foremost on telling people about what our abstract models suggest makes science on a societal scale so effective; fixate first and foremost on making them good scientists in their daily lives, in every concrete action.
No, I think that kernel (and we are speaking in the context of “fast-and-ready”) of thought is really the most important thing to convey. Speaking abstractly, even science doesn’t take that kernel seriously enough. It doesn’t question how it should allocate its limited resources or improve its function. This is costing millions of lives, untold suffering, and perhaps our species continued existence. But it does employ a self-improving feedback cycle on reality which is just enough for it to uncover reality. It needs to install a self-improving feedback cycle on itself. And then we need a self-improving feedback cycle on feedback cycles. I can’t think of any abstraction more important in making progress with something.
Abstractly, bee hives produce honey. Concretely, this bee hive in front of me is producing honey. Abstractly, science is the product of professions, institutions, ect. Concretely, science is the product of people on our planet doing stuff.
It sounds like you’re conflating abstract/concrete with general/particular. But a universal generalization might just be the conjunction of a lot of particulars. I prefer to think of ‘abstract’ as ‘not spatially extended or localized.’ Societies are generally considered more abstract than mental states because mental states are intuitively treated as more localized. But ‘lots of mental states’ is not more abstract than ‘just one mental state,’ in the same way that thousands of bees (or ‘all the bees,’ in your example) can be just as concrete as a single bee.
But when you say science is a bunch of abstractions (like I think your definitions are)
We’re back at square one. I still don’t see why reasoning is more abstract than professions, institutions, etc. We agree that it all reduces to human behaviors on some level. But the ‘abstract vs. concrete’ discussion is a complete tangent. What’s relevant is whether it’s useful to have separate concepts of ‘the practice of science’ vs. ‘professional science,’ the former being something even laypeople can participate in by adopting certain methodological standards. I think both concepts are useful. You seem to think that only ‘professional science’ is a useful concept, at least in most cases. Is that a fair summary?
This is exactly why I want to avoid defining science with abstractions. It literally does not make sense if you think of science as it is. “Scientific” imports essentialism.
Counterfactuals don’t make sense if you think of things as they are? I don’t think that’s true in any nontrivial sense....
‘Scientific’ is not any more guilty of essentializing than are any of our other fuzzy, ordinary-language terms. There are salient properties associated with being a scientist; I’m suggesting that many of those clustered properties, in particular many of the ones we most care about when we promote and praise things like ‘science’ and ‘naturalism,’ can occur in isolated individuals. If you don’t like calling what I’m talking about ‘scientific,’ then coin a different word for it; but we need some word. We need to be able to denote our exemplary decision procedures, just to win the war of ideas.
‘Professional science’ is not an exemplary decision procedure, any more than ‘the buildings and faculty at MIT’ is an exemplary decision procedure. It’s just an especially effective instantiation thereof.
I can’t think of any abstraction more important in making progress with something.
Maybe we’re just not approaching the problem at the same levels. When I ask about what the optimal way is to define our concepts, I’m trying to define them in a way that allows us to consistently and usefully explain them (in any number of paraphrased forms) to 8th-graders, to congressmen, to literary theorists, such that we can promote the best techniques we associate with scientists, philosophers, and mathematicians. I’m imagining how we would design a scientific+philosophical+mathematical+etc. literacy pamphlet that would teach people how to win at life. It sounds like you’re instead trying to think of a single sentence that summarizes what winning at life is, at its most abstract. ‘Adopt a self-improving feedback cycle linking you to reality’ is just a fancy way of saying ‘Behave in a way that predictably makes you better and better at doing good stuff.’ Which is great, but not especially contentful as yet. I only care about people understanding how winning works insofar as this understanding helps them actually win.
I prefer to think of ‘abstract’ as ‘not spatially extended or localized.’
I prefer to think of it as anything existing at least partly in mind, and then we can say we have an abstraction of an abstraction or that something something is more abstract (something from category theory being a pure abstraction, while something like the category “dog” being less abstract because it connects with a pattern of atoms in reality). By their nature, abstractions are also universals, but things that actually exist like the bee hive in front of me aren’t particulars at the concrete level. The specific bee hive in my mind that I’m imagining is a particular, or the “bee hive” that I’m seeing and interpreting into a bee hive in front of me is also a particular, but the bee hive is just a “pattern” of atoms.
What’s relevant is whether it’s useful to have separate concepts of ‘the practice of science’ vs. ‘professional science,’ the former being something even laypeople can participate in by adopting certain methodological standards. I think both concepts are useful. You seem to think that only ‘professional science’ is a useful concept, at least in most cases. Is that a fair summary?
Framing those concepts in terms of usefulness isn’t helpful, I think. I’d simply say the laypeople are doing something different unless they’re contributing to our body of knowledge. In which case, science as it is requires that those laypeople interact with science as it is (journals and such).
Counterfactuals don’t make sense if you think of things as they are?
No, I mean thinking of someone as being scientific doesn’t make sense if you think of science as it is because e.g. the sixth grader at the science fair that we all “scientific” isn’t interacting with science as it is. We’re taking some essential properties we pattern match in science as it is, and then we abstract them, and then we apply them by pattern matching.
I’m suggesting that many of those clustered properties, in particular many of the ones we most care about when we promote and praise things like ‘science’ and ‘naturalism,’ can occur in isolated individuals.
We can imagine an immortal human being on another planet replicating everything science has done on Earth thus far. So, yes I think it can occur in isolated individuals, but that’s only because the individual has taken on everything that science is and not some like “carefully collecting empirical data, and carefully reasoning about its predictive and transparently ontological significance.”
If I’m going to apply an abstraction to what I praise in science to individuals, it’s not “being scientific” or “doing science”, it’s “working with feedback.” It’s what programmers do, it’s what engineers do, it’s what mathematicians, it’s what scientists do, it’s what people that effectively lose weight do, and so on. It’s the kernel of thought most conducive to progress in any area.
Maybe we’re just not approaching the problem at the same levels. When I ask about what the optimal way is to define our concepts, I’m trying to define them in a way that allows us to consistently ..
I think we are approaching the problem at the same level. I think I have optimally defined the concepts, and I think “behave in a way that predictably makes you better and better at doing good stuff” is what needs to be communicated and not “science: carefully collecting empirical data, and carefully reasoning about its predictive and transparently ontological significance.” If we’re going to add more content, then we should talk about how to effectively measure self-improvement, how to get solid feedback and so on. With that knowledge, I think a bunch of kids working together could rebuild science from the ground up.
If, in some cataclysm, all of scientific knowledge were to be destroyed, and only one sentence passed on to the next generation of creatures, what statement would contain the most information in the fewest words? I believe it is the atomic hypothesis that all things are made of atoms — little particles that move around in perpetual motion, attracting each other when they are a little distance… -- Feynman
I’d pass on how important “behave in a way that predictably makes you better and better at doing good stuff” is.
I prefer to think of it as anything existing at least partly in mind
That’s problematic, first, because it leaves mind itself in a strange position. And second because, if mathematical platonism (for example) were true, then there would exist abstract objects that are mind-independent.
We’re taking some essential properties we pattern match in science as it is, and then we abstract them, and then we apply them by pattern matching.
You seem to be assuming the pattern-matching of this sort is a vice. If it’s useful to mark the pattern in question, and we recognize that we’re doing so for utilitarian reasons and not because there’s a transcendent Essence of Scienceyness, then the pattern-matching is benign. It’s how humans think, and we can’t become completely inhuman if our goal is to take the rest of mankind with us into the future. Not yet, anyway.
Religions are also feedback loops. The more I believe, the more my belief gets confirmed. Remarkable! The primary problem with this ultra-attenuated notion of what we want is that all the work is being done by the black-box normative terms like ‘improvement’ and ‘better’ and ‘optimal.’ Everything we’re actually trying to concretely teach is hidden behind those words.
We also need more content than ‘working with a feedback loop from reality’; that kind of metaphorical talk might fly on LessWrong, but it’s really a summary of some implicit intuitions we already share, not instruction we could in those words convey to someone who doesn’t already see what we’re getting at. After all, everything exists in a back-and-forth with reality, and everything is for that matter part of reality. Perhaps my formulations of what we want are too concrete; but yours are certainly too abstract and underdetermined.
Also could you expand on this as I didn’t catch it before the edit?
It’s not obvious what the “bad habits” might be, and what they are bad relative to. This reads as a claim that would be very hard to defend at face value, and without clarification it reads like a throwaway attack not to be taken seriously.
Examples of bad habits often picked up from reading too much philosophy: arguing endlessly about definitions, or using one’s own intuitions as strong evidence about how the external world works. These are bad habits relative to, you know, not arguing endlessly about definitions, and using science to figure out how the world works.
Is the problem the arguing, or the arguing endlessly? In science, there is little need to argue about definitions because Someone Somewhere has settled the issue, often by stipulation. In philosophy, there is no Someone Somewhere who convenientyl does this for you. Philosophy deals with non-empirical questions (or it would be science), which means it deals with concepts, and since we access concepts with words, it deals with definitions. So the criticism that philosophers shouldn’t argue definitions is tantamount to criticising philosophy for being philosophy. Uless the problem was the “endlessly”.
Who does that? (ETA: at least for the past one hundred years) None of your examples work that way. Questions like “what is knowledge” and “what is the right thing to do” are not about the EW.
The problem is “arguing” as compared to “investigating”.
If there’s a disagreement about how human minds implement certain ideas, then it’s more productive to do experimental psychology than to discuss it abstractly, for the usual scientific reasons: nailing it down to a prediction makes sure that the idea in question is actually coherent, and also there are a lot of potential pitfalls when humans try to use their own brains to examine their own brains.
Though on the other hand, coming up with good experiments for this stuff is really tricky. As Suryc mentions above, you can’t just ask people what they mean by “intentional” or whatever, you’ll get garbage results. Just like how if you ask somebody with no linguistics knowledge to explain English grammar to you you’ll get nonsense back, even if that person is quite capable at actually writing in English.
Also: Who says that concepts are non-empirical? Doesn’t it come down to something like a scientific investigation into the operations of the human brain?
Not with current technology.
So this comes down to what you said previously about not liking people who came out of Philosophy 101, e.g., it’s an argument against a philosophical tradition that does not actually exist.
You mention naturalism as a “bad habit” for using science to understand the world?
Do you actually understand what naturalism is and what relationship it has with science?
No, he doesn’t (which is why I downvoted this comment, BTW). Luke says that even naturalistic philosophers exhibit these bad habits. He does not say that naturalism is a bad habit, or that it’s a bad habit because it uses science to understand the world.
Not quite:
“Teach” implies that engaging one’s self with “too much” mainstream philosophy will cause bad habits to arise (and make one unable to do ‘real work’, whatever that might be).
Unexamined presuppositions make a wonderful basis for discourse.
I don’t think that’s what lukeprog meant. That said, thinking ‘naturalism’ is a unitary concept that the members of some relevant linguistic community or intellectual elite share is itself a startlingly good example of the sort of practice lukeprog’s ‘intuitions aren’t shared’ meme is warning about.
The Stanford Encyclopedia article on naturalism itself begins, amusingly enough:
But calling it a “bad habit” with no justification or qualification is exempt from being an equally good (better, in fact, given that I’d not at all expanded on naturalism and certainly not with a dismissive one-liner) example of the “corrective”?
PS—the Stanford Encyclopedia is as good a “proof” as posting a link from Wikipedia. There is (of course) debate in philosophy, but to claim that “naturalism” encourages “bad habits” is just plain sloppy thinking and a strawman built against equally sloppy philosophy undergrads.
If intuitions aren’t reliable, then this entire line of thought is unreliable :-)
To be frank, although I speak for myself and not lukeprog, framing the scientific method or world-view in terms of ‘naturalism,’ or in terms of a nature/‘supernature’ dichotomy, is a bad habit. I can’t say much more than that until you explain what you personally mean by ‘naturalism.’
I don’t follow. A Stanford Encyclopedia is much better evidence for the professional consensus of philosophers than is a Wikipedia article.
Are you alluding to the fact that we all rely on intuitions in our everyday reason? If so, this is an important point. The take-away message from philosophy’s excesses is not ‘Avoid all intuitions.’ It’s ‘Scrutinize intuitions to determine which ones we have reason to expect to match the contours of the territory.’ The successes of philosophy—successes like ‘science’ and ‘mathematics’ and ‘logic’—are formalized and heavily scrutinized networks of intuitions, intuitions that we have good empirical reason to think happen to be of a rare sort that correspond to the large-scale structure of reality. Most of our intuitions aren’t like that, though they may still be useful and interesting in other respects.
I’m thinking of naturalism as broadly accepted by modern analytic philosophy, in Quine’s terms and in more modern constructions which emphasize i) that the natural world is the “only” world (this is not to be confused with a dualistic opposition to anything “supernatural”; the supernatural is simply ruled out as an option) and ii) that science is a preferred means of obtaining knowledge about said world.
I realize that’s less clear than you may want, but the vagueness of the term is part of why I found it objectionable to treat is as instilling “bad habits”.
Well, indirectly, but the specific point was that the argument presented here is an intuition about what goes on in philosophy, what constitutes the current trends and debates within the discipline, and so on, and it appears to me that it is more strawman than a rigorous reply to those activities.
Given that it’s an intuition underpinning an article about the unreliability of intuitions, well...you can appreciate the meta-humor I found there.
Of course, and as I’ve relayed in other comments, this is no insight to philosophers—philosophers already do this. We could of course point out instances where the philosopher’s argument is predicated on validating intutions, but even there you are guaranteed to see a more nuanced position than the uncritical acceptance of common-sense intuitions, and as such even those positions mandate more than a sweeping dismissal.
And ethics/meta-ethics, moral theory, social theory, aesthetics...all of these are, at least in part, beyond the realm of the empirical, and it is a philosophical stance you have taken which puts them in the realm of the physical and empirical or else excludes their reality (if you go the eliminativist route).
These domains are arguably as successful at what they do as math and logic have been in their respective domains, and frankly they don’t operate anything like what you’ve described (re: empirically-discovered relations to the large scale of reality). This is part of why we need naturalistic philosophy, because without it you wind up with unabashed scientism like this, which sits right on the precipice of “ethical” choices which can be monstrous.
Personally I think even other forms of philosophy are not only useful, but what have been called “bad habits” by Eliezer et al. are actually central components of a lived human life. I wouldn’t be so hasty to get rid of them, and certainly not with such a sweeping set of dismissals about the primacy of science.
Define “natural world” so that it’s clearer how the above is non-tautological.
If you aren’t denying or opposing anything, then what work is “only” doing in the sense “the natural world is the only world”?
What does it mean in this context to ‘rule out as an option’ something? How does this differ from ‘opposing’ an option?
Define ‘science,’ while you’re at it. Is looking out the window science? Is logical deduction science? Is logical deduction science when your premises are ‘about the world’? Same question for mathematical reasoning. I’d think most scientists in their daily lives would actually consider logical or mathematical reasoning stronger than, ‘preferred’ over, any scientific observation or theory.
The vagueness of the term ‘naturalism’ is the primary reason it’s a bad habit to define your methods or world-view in terms of it.
I don’t know what you mean by ‘beyond the realm of the empirical.’ Plenty of logic and mathematics also transcends the observable. I think we’d get a lot further in this discussion if we started defining or tabooing ‘science,’ ‘philosophy,’ ‘empirical,’ ‘natural,’ etc.
To be honest, this sentence here pretty much sums up what I think is wrong with modern philosophy. There is virtually no content to ‘naturalism’ or ‘scientism,’ beyond the fact that both are associated with science and the former has a positive connotation, while the latter has a negative connotation. Thus we see much of the modern philosophical (and pop-philosophical) discourse consumed in hand-wringing over whether something is ‘naturalistic’ (goodscience! happy face!) or whether something is ‘scientistic’ (badscience! frowny face!), and the whole framing does nothing but obscure what’s actually under debate. Any non-trivial definition of ‘naturalism’ and ‘scientism’ will allow that a reasonable scientist might be forced to forsake naturalism, or adopt scientism, in at least some circumstances; and any circular or otherwise trivial one is not worth discussing.
In that there is “no more than”, in ontological terms, there are no other fundamental categories of being. I don’t have to explicitly deny that unicorns exist in order to rule them out of any taxonomy of equine animals.
If you’ve presupposed a worldview that allows for “supernatural” or “mystical” or Cartesian mind-substance or what have you, then of course the opposition seems obvious, but modern analytical naturalism as it stands makes no such allowance. This is why we cannot take our presuppositions for granted.
You don’t have the space on this forum for that debate. However, for pragmatic purposes, let’s (roughly) call it the social activity of institutionalized formal empirical inquiry, inclusive of the error-correcting norms and structures meant to filter our systematic errors.
Maybe if you didn’t take flippant comments and run with them you wouldn’t encounter this problem. I brought up naturalism because I found it hilarious that “even modern analytic philosophy” teaches these laughably vague “bad habits”—which you still seem surprisingly unconcerned with, given the far more serious issues there—and contemporary naturalism as practiced by many philosophers in the English-speaking world is as pro-science a set of ideas as you’ll find.
Spiraling it out into this protracted debate about whether we can accurately define naturalism—on your terms, no less—is not the point of the exercise (and I suspect it’s only happened to take the focus off the matter at hand: that there is no adequate account of these “bad habits” and we’re seeing an interference play to keep eyes off it).
Yes I’m well aware of the dislike of anything intrinsically opposed to the formal and computable around these parts, and I also find that position to be laughable (and a shining example of why you folks need to engage with philosophy rather than jumping head-first into troubling [and equally laughable] moral-ethical positions).
But, as per the thread, there is a more interesting and proximate criticism: your intuitions on such are unreliable, by your own lights, so you’ll pardon me if I am hardly persuaded by your fiat declaration that i) there is “no content” to a whole wide-ranging debate (of which you seem barely familiar with, at that, with your introduction of yet another nonsensical opposition that might as well be fiction for all it reflects the actual process*) and ii) that we should—again by decree—paint as “useless” the tools and methods used to engage in the debate.
We are only fortunate that the actual intellectual world doesn’t conduct itself like a message board.
PS There is no serious debate “between” naturalism and scientism. The latter isn’t even a “position” as such, even less so than naturalism could be.
No. It’s an argument against a philosophical tradition that does exist.
In this “Philosophy by Humans” sub-sequence, it seems like the most common response I get is, “No, philosophers can’t actually be that stupid,” even though my post went to the trouble of quoting philosophers saying “Yes, this thing here is our standard practice.”
I’ll say it again: by “intuition” they might mean “shared intuition”, in which case they are doing nothing wrong so long as there are some, and so long as they rejected purported intuitions which aren’t shared.
So? I can quote scientists saying all manner of stupid, bizarre, unintuitive things...but my selection of course sets up the terms of the discussion. If I choose a sampling that only confirms my existing bias against scientists, then my “quotes” are going to lead to the foregone conclusion. I don’t see why “quoting” a few names is considered evidence of anything besides a pre-existing bias against philosophy.
On a second and more important point, you’ve yet to elaborate on why having a debate about ethics is problematic in the first place. Your appeal to Eliezer and his vague handwaving about “bad habits” and “real work” (which range from “too vague” to “nonsensical” depending on how charitable you want to be) is not persuasive, so I’d ask again: what is wrong with philosophy doing what it is supposed to do, i.e., examine ideas?
I realize that declaring it “wrong” by fiat seems to be the rule around here, if the comments are any indication, but from the philosophical standpoint that’s a laughable argument to make, and it’s not persuasive to anyone who doesn’t already share your presuppositions.
So you’re worried about the problem of filtered evidence. Throughout this sequence, I’ve given lots of citations and direct quotes of philosophers doing things — and saying that they’re doing things — which don’t make sense given certain pieces of scientific evidence. Can you, then, provide citations or quotes of philosophers saying “No, we aren’t really appealing to intuitions in this way?” I’ll bet you can find a few, but I don’t think they’ll say that their own approach is the standard one.
You’re asking me to do all the work, here. I’ve provided examples and evidence, and you’ve just flatly denied my examples and evidence without providing any counterexamples or counterevidence. That’s logically rude.
Here, you managed to straw man me twice in a single paragraph. I never said that debates about ethics are problematic, and I never said there’s something wrong with philosophy examining ideas. I’ve only ever said that specific, particular ways of examining ideas or having philosophical debates are problematic, and I’ve explained in detail why those specific, particular methods are problematic. You’re just ignoring what I’ve actually said, and what I have not said.
Again, I’m the one who bothered to provide examples and evidence for my position. You’re the one who keeps declaring things wrong without providing any examples and evidence to support your own view. Declaring something wrong without providing reason or evidence is against the cultural norm around here, and you are the one who is violating it.
All I’ve asked you to do is at least pretend you have some familiarity with the field’s content, and how that content relates to its raison d’etre. As before, I don’t have to provide “counterevidence” that science doesn’t take luminiferous ether seriously as a hypothesis; anyone familiar with the field would already know this.
Of course you didn’t say it, because that would be stupid, but it’s implicit in the points you’ve repeatedly made, viz. “philosophers are stupid, if they only paid attention to science....” Well, they do pay attention to science, in fact there is a whole realm of philosophers who pay attention to science and make that a centerpiece of their discussion, and that given philosophy’s purpose as “engagement with ideas” it is implicit that, wonder of wonders, some philosophers will take positions that disagree with the claim you’ve put forth.
That latter statement is the issue, as you said in your article that, since some philosophers accept intuitions as valid (a claim you never bothered to unpack or examine in any detail), therefore we should consider philosophy a primitive and useless artifact of Cartesian thinking.
You’ve taken it for granted without outright saying it. Maybe if you read more philosophy you wouldn’t make these kinds of errors.
I see, so the cultural norm is to take unfavorable samples of a field you don’t like, present them as exemplars, used them as grounds to justify a giant-sized strawman against said field, complain when people don’t accept that position without criticism, and then hide behind conveniently linked rules meant to fortify your pre-existing groupthink.
Sounds far more rational than every other web forum ever.
To expand on your point, philosophers like Thomas Kuhn and Paul Feyerabend provide a vision of what sophisticated modern philosophy can do to improve the scientist’s perspective.
It’s so much fun to write that. Still, please don’t. Your point is well made in the previous paragraph—this sentence only detracts from your persuasiveness.
I don’t understand. Certainly, I’m at least “pretending” to have “some familiarity” with the field’s content, and how that content relates to its raison d’etre, by way of citing hundreds of works in the field, quoting philosophers, hosting a podcast for which I interviewed dozens of philosophers for hours on end, etc.
Of course many philosophers pay attention to science. When Eliezer wrote, “If there’s any centralized repository of reductionist-grade naturalistic cognitive philosophy, I’ve never heard mention of it,” I replied (earlier in this sequence):
Again: you’re straw-manning me. I’ve said specific things about the ways in which many philosophers are ignoring scientific results, but I’m quite aware that they pay attention to other parts of science, and of course that many of them (e.g. the experimental philosophers) pay attention to the kinds of evidence that I’m accusing others of ignoring.
Straw man number… 5? 6? I’ve lost count. Where did I say that?
Wait, first you claim that “you said in your article that...” and in the very next paragraph you claim that I’ve “taken it for granted without outright saying it”? I’m very confused.
No. I complain when I do all the work of presenting arguments, examples, and evidence, and you simply deny it all without presenting any arguments, examples, and evidence of your own.
You’d think if this were the case you’d be able to make a more honest assessment of the field.
Alright, I’ll grant you this. You’ve still made the point that the field of philosophy has not acknowledged the unreliability of intuitions, as if this were a novel insight and not something that is taken very seriously in the modern-day (at least) debates, and that this is a fundamental flaw in the discipline itself.
Right here:
The implication being that Cartesian views of mind and reason are in any way relevant to modern philosophy. This isn’t even true for Continental philosophy and hasn’t been for a long time.
I agree, you are, so let’s slow down and look at my actual criticism again.
What you wrote was that philosophers accept intutions at face value, uncritically...which isn’t true, and I responded accordingly.
What you implied, in that it follows necessarily from your explicitly-made argument, is that since some philosophers accept intutions as valid, therefore the discipline-as-a-whole is broken. But that isn’t true; the entire point is to discuss disparate, conflicting, and even dubious ideas; this is no blackmark as you’ve construed it.
A convenient way to hide behind your biases, I suppose, but I’m not sure what it accomplishes otherwise. Even the Stanford Encyclopedia’s entries on moral theory and ethics don’t back up your “unique” assessment of the field.
I don’t think this is going anywhere useful. You’re still straw-manning me and failing to provide exact counterexamples and counter-evidence. I’m moving on to more productive activities.
Improving upon this: why care about what the worst of a field has to say? It’s the 10% (stergeon’s law) that aren’t crap that we should care about. The best material scientists give us incremental improvements in our materials technology, and the worst write papers that are never read or do research that is never used. But what do the best philosophers of meta-ethics give us? More well examined ideas? How would you measure such a thing? How can those best philosophers know they’re making progress? How can they improve the tools they use? Why should we fund philosophy departments?
The best ethical philosophers give us the foundations of utility calculation, clarify when we can (and can’t) derive facts and values from each other, generate heuristics and frameworks within which to do politics and resolve disputes over goals and priorities. The best metaphysicians give us scientific reasoning, novel interpretations of quantum mechanics, warnings of scientists becoming overreliant on some component of common sense, and new empirical research programs (Einstein’s most important work consisted of metaphysical thought experiments). The best logicians and linguistic philosophers give us the propositional calculus, knowledge of valid and invalid forms, etc., etc. Even if you think the modalists and dialetheists are crazy, you can be very thankful to them for developing modal and paraconsistent logics that have valuable applications outside of traditional philosophical disputes.
And, of course, philosophy in general is useful for testing the tools of our trade. We can be more confident of and skilled in our reasoning in specific domains, like physics and electrical engineering and differential calculus, when those tools have been put to the test in foundational disputes. A bad Philosophy 101 class can lead to hyperskepticism or metaphysical dogmatism, but a good Philosophy 101 class can lead to a healthy skepticism mixed with intellectual curiosity and dynamism. Ultimately, the reason to fund ‘philosophy’ departments is that there is no such thing as ‘philosophy;’ what the departments in question are really teaching is how to think carefully about the most difficult questions. The actual questions have nothing especially in common, beyond their difficulty, their intractability before our ordinary methods.
I’m a bit worried that your conception of philosophy is riding on the coat tails of long-past-philosophy where the distinction between philosophy, math, and science were much more blurred than they are now. Being generous, do you have any examples from the last few decades (that I can read about)?
I’ll agree with you that having some philosophical training is better than none in that it can be useful in getting a solid footing in basic critical thinking skills, but then if that’s a philosophy department’s purpose then it doesn’t need to be funded beyond that.
Could you taboo/define ‘philosophy,’ ‘math,’ and ‘science’ for me in a way that clarifies exactly how they don’t overlap? It’d be very helpful. Is there any principled reason, for example, that theoretical physics cannot be philosophy? Or is some theoretical physics philosophy, and some not? Is there a sharp line, or a continuum between the two kinds of theoretical physics?
If that’s a philosophy department’s purpose, and nothing else can fulfill the same purpose, then philosophy departments are vastly underfunded as it stands. (Though I agree the current funding could be better managed.)
But the real flaw is that we think of philosophy as a college thing. Philosophical training should be fully integrated into quite early-age education in logical, scientific, mathematical, moral, and other forms of reasoning.
I didn’t say they don’t overlap. I said the distinctions have become less blurred (I think because of the need for increased specialization in all intellectual endeavours as we accumulate more knowledge). I define philosophy, math, and science by their professions. That is, their university departments, their journals, their majors, their textbooks, and so on.
Hence, I think the best way to ask if “philosophy” is a worthwhile endeavour is to asked “why should we fund philosophy departments?” A better way to ask that question is “why should we fund philosophy research and professional philosophers (as opposed to teachers of basic philosophy)?”
And though while I think basic philosophy can be helpful in getting a footing in critical thinking, I also think CFAR is considerably better at teaching critical thinking.
I don’t see any principled reason for why we can’t all be generalists without labels. Practical reasons, yes.
I thought you were saying that the distinctions have become less blurred? Now I’m confused.
That’s fine for some everyday purposes. But if we want to distinguish the useful behaviors in each profession from the useless ones, and promote the best behaviors both among laypeople and among professionals, we need more fine-grained categories than just ‘everything that people who publish in journals seen as philosophy journals do.’ I think it would be useful to distinguish Professional Philosophy, Professional Science, and Professional Mathematics from the basic human practices of philosophizing, doing science, or reasoning mathematically. Something in the neighborhood of these ideas would be quite useful:
mathematics: carefully and systematically reasoning about quantity, or (more loosely) about the quantitative properties and relationships of things.
philosophy: carefully reasoning about generalizations, via ‘internal’ reflection (phenomenology, thought experiments, conceptual analysis, etc.), in a moderately (more than shamanic storytelling, less than math or logic) systematic way.
science: carefully collecting empirical data, and carefully reasoning about its predictive and transparently ontological significance.
Do you think these would be useful fast-and-ready definitions for everyday promotion of scientific, philosophical, and mathematical literacy? Would you modify any of them?
Yup, my bad. You caught me before my edit.
I think you’re reifying abstraction and doing so will introduce pitfalls when discussing them. Math, science, and philosophy are the abstracted output of their respective professions. If you take away science’s competitive incentive structure or change its mechanism of output (journal articles) then you’re modifying science. If you install a self-improving recursive feedback cycle with reality in philosophy, then I think you’ve recreated math and science within philosophy (because science is fundamentally concrete reasoning while math is abstract reasoning and philosophy carries both).
If I’m going to promote something to laypeople, it’s that a mechanism of recursive self-improvement is desirable. There’s plenty to unpack there, though. Like you need a measure of improvement that contacts reality.
I think your definitions are more abstract than mine. For me, mathematics, philosophy, and science are embodied brain behaviors — modes of reasoning. For you, if I’m understanding you right, they’re professions, institutions, social groups, population-wide behaviors. Sociology is generally considered more abstract or high-level than psychology.
(Of course, I don’t reject your definitions on that account; denying the existence of philosophizing or of professional philosophy because one or the other is ‘abstract’ would be as silly as denying the existence of abstractions like debt, difficulty, truth, or natural selection. I just think your abstraction is of somewhat more limited utility than mine, when our goal is to spread good philosophizing, science, and mathematics rather than to treat the good qualities of those disciplines as the special property of a prestigious intellectual elite belonging to a specific network of organizations.)
Feedback cycles are great, but we don’t need to build them into our definition of ‘science’ in order to praise science for happening to possess them; if we put each scientist on a separate island, their work might suffer as a result, but it’s not clear to me that they would lose all ability to do anything scientific, or that we should fail to clearly distinguish the scientifically-minded desert-islander for his unusual behaviors.
Also, it’s not clear in what sense mathematics has a self-improving recursive feedback cycle with reality. Actually, mathematics and philosophy seem to function very analogously in terms of their relationship to reality and to science.
I’m not sure that’s the best approach. Telling people to find a recursively self-improving method is not likely to be as effective as giving them concrete reasoning skills (like how to perform thought experiments, or how to devise empirical hypotheses, or how to multiply quantities) and then letting intelligent society-wide behaviors emerge via the marketplace of ideas (or via top-down societal structuring, if necessary). Don’t fixate first and foremost on telling people about what our abstract models suggest makes science on a societal scale so effective; fixate first and foremost on making them good scientists in their daily lives, in every concrete action.
You’re kind of understanding me. Abstractly, bee hives produce honey. Concretely, this bee hive in front of me is producing honey. Abstractly, science is the product of professions, institutions, ect. Concretely, science is the product of people on our planet doing stuff.
I’m literally trying to not talk about abstractions or concepts but science as it actually is. And of course, science as it actually is does things that we can then categorize into abstractions like feedback cycles. But when you say science is a bunch of abstractions (like I think your definitions are), then you’re missing out on what it actually is.
This is exactly why I want to avoid defining science with abstractions. It literally does not make sense if you think of science as it is. “Scientific” imports essentialism.
Mathematics is self-improving while at the same time hinging on reality. This is tricky to explain so I might come back to it tomorrow when I’m more well rested (i.e., not drunk).
No, I think that kernel (and we are speaking in the context of “fast-and-ready”) of thought is really the most important thing to convey. Speaking abstractly, even science doesn’t take that kernel seriously enough. It doesn’t question how it should allocate its limited resources or improve its function. This is costing millions of lives, untold suffering, and perhaps our species continued existence. But it does employ a self-improving feedback cycle on reality which is just enough for it to uncover reality. It needs to install a self-improving feedback cycle on itself. And then we need a self-improving feedback cycle on feedback cycles. I can’t think of any abstraction more important in making progress with something.
It sounds like you’re conflating abstract/concrete with general/particular. But a universal generalization might just be the conjunction of a lot of particulars. I prefer to think of ‘abstract’ as ‘not spatially extended or localized.’ Societies are generally considered more abstract than mental states because mental states are intuitively treated as more localized. But ‘lots of mental states’ is not more abstract than ‘just one mental state,’ in the same way that thousands of bees (or ‘all the bees,’ in your example) can be just as concrete as a single bee.
We’re back at square one. I still don’t see why reasoning is more abstract than professions, institutions, etc. We agree that it all reduces to human behaviors on some level. But the ‘abstract vs. concrete’ discussion is a complete tangent. What’s relevant is whether it’s useful to have separate concepts of ‘the practice of science’ vs. ‘professional science,’ the former being something even laypeople can participate in by adopting certain methodological standards. I think both concepts are useful. You seem to think that only ‘professional science’ is a useful concept, at least in most cases. Is that a fair summary?
Counterfactuals don’t make sense if you think of things as they are? I don’t think that’s true in any nontrivial sense....
‘Scientific’ is not any more guilty of essentializing than are any of our other fuzzy, ordinary-language terms. There are salient properties associated with being a scientist; I’m suggesting that many of those clustered properties, in particular many of the ones we most care about when we promote and praise things like ‘science’ and ‘naturalism,’ can occur in isolated individuals. If you don’t like calling what I’m talking about ‘scientific,’ then coin a different word for it; but we need some word. We need to be able to denote our exemplary decision procedures, just to win the war of ideas.
‘Professional science’ is not an exemplary decision procedure, any more than ‘the buildings and faculty at MIT’ is an exemplary decision procedure. It’s just an especially effective instantiation thereof.
Maybe we’re just not approaching the problem at the same levels. When I ask about what the optimal way is to define our concepts, I’m trying to define them in a way that allows us to consistently and usefully explain them (in any number of paraphrased forms) to 8th-graders, to congressmen, to literary theorists, such that we can promote the best techniques we associate with scientists, philosophers, and mathematicians. I’m imagining how we would design a scientific+philosophical+mathematical+etc. literacy pamphlet that would teach people how to win at life. It sounds like you’re instead trying to think of a single sentence that summarizes what winning at life is, at its most abstract. ‘Adopt a self-improving feedback cycle linking you to reality’ is just a fancy way of saying ‘Behave in a way that predictably makes you better and better at doing good stuff.’ Which is great, but not especially contentful as yet. I only care about people understanding how winning works insofar as this understanding helps them actually win.
I prefer to think of it as anything existing at least partly in mind, and then we can say we have an abstraction of an abstraction or that something something is more abstract (something from category theory being a pure abstraction, while something like the category “dog” being less abstract because it connects with a pattern of atoms in reality). By their nature, abstractions are also universals, but things that actually exist like the bee hive in front of me aren’t particulars at the concrete level. The specific bee hive in my mind that I’m imagining is a particular, or the “bee hive” that I’m seeing and interpreting into a bee hive in front of me is also a particular, but the bee hive is just a “pattern” of atoms.
I think that you’re stuck in noun-land while I’m in verb-land, but I don’t think noun-land is concrete (it’s an abstraction).
Framing those concepts in terms of usefulness isn’t helpful, I think. I’d simply say the laypeople are doing something different unless they’re contributing to our body of knowledge. In which case, science as it is requires that those laypeople interact with science as it is (journals and such).
No, I mean thinking of someone as being scientific doesn’t make sense if you think of science as it is because e.g. the sixth grader at the science fair that we all “scientific” isn’t interacting with science as it is. We’re taking some essential properties we pattern match in science as it is, and then we abstract them, and then we apply them by pattern matching.
We can imagine an immortal human being on another planet replicating everything science has done on Earth thus far. So, yes I think it can occur in isolated individuals, but that’s only because the individual has taken on everything that science is and not some like “carefully collecting empirical data, and carefully reasoning about its predictive and transparently ontological significance.”
If I’m going to apply an abstraction to what I praise in science to individuals, it’s not “being scientific” or “doing science”, it’s “working with feedback.” It’s what programmers do, it’s what engineers do, it’s what mathematicians, it’s what scientists do, it’s what people that effectively lose weight do, and so on. It’s the kernel of thought most conducive to progress in any area.
I think we are approaching the problem at the same level. I think I have optimally defined the concepts, and I think “behave in a way that predictably makes you better and better at doing good stuff” is what needs to be communicated and not “science: carefully collecting empirical data, and carefully reasoning about its predictive and transparently ontological significance.” If we’re going to add more content, then we should talk about how to effectively measure self-improvement, how to get solid feedback and so on. With that knowledge, I think a bunch of kids working together could rebuild science from the ground up.
I’d pass on how important “behave in a way that predictably makes you better and better at doing good stuff” is.
That’s problematic, first, because it leaves mind itself in a strange position. And second because, if mathematical platonism (for example) were true, then there would exist abstract objects that are mind-independent.
You seem to be assuming the pattern-matching of this sort is a vice. If it’s useful to mark the pattern in question, and we recognize that we’re doing so for utilitarian reasons and not because there’s a transcendent Essence of Scienceyness, then the pattern-matching is benign. It’s how humans think, and we can’t become completely inhuman if our goal is to take the rest of mankind with us into the future. Not yet, anyway.
Religions are also feedback loops. The more I believe, the more my belief gets confirmed. Remarkable! The primary problem with this ultra-attenuated notion of what we want is that all the work is being done by the black-box normative terms like ‘improvement’ and ‘better’ and ‘optimal.’ Everything we’re actually trying to concretely teach is hidden behind those words.
We also need more content than ‘working with a feedback loop from reality’; that kind of metaphorical talk might fly on LessWrong, but it’s really a summary of some implicit intuitions we already share, not instruction we could in those words convey to someone who doesn’t already see what we’re getting at. After all, everything exists in a back-and-forth with reality, and everything is for that matter part of reality. Perhaps my formulations of what we want are too concrete; but yours are certainly too abstract and underdetermined.
This seems reasonable.
Agreed. What is critical here is whether there are better habits.