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 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.