tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-62315537677607289682009-05-27T12:45:49.948-07:00spontaneity&receptivitydiscussion of john mcdowell's mind and world with emphasis on mcdowell's writing about philosophy of language and mind.j matthias downoreply@blogger.comBlogger45125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-60640139638608929282009-04-18T06:34:00.000-07:002009-04-18T07:06:06.303-07:00Intro to Mind and WorldI'm going to be presenting in prose form some of parts of my lectures of my lectures on Mind and World. I begin with the Kantian background for the lectures. Although McD says that he's writing a prolegomena to the Phenemonology of Spirit, it's Kant's first critique (and third) that provides much of the architecture for the edifice. There are two sets of notions that need elucidation. On the one hand, concepts and intuitions. And on the other hand, spontaneity and receptivity. <br /><br />One way to access why these Kantian notions are pivotal is to begin with the question that leads to the need for these notions. And, Lecture 1 really begins with a how possible question: “How is empirical content possible?” McDowell draws from Kant in order to answer this question. What does McDowell take from Kant? First, he uses the general transcendental strategy. And answer to the how-possible question cannot go merely through a causal-intentional explanation. Two contrasting answer to the how-possible question that McDowell would reject might be (1) the causal abstractionist picture in which empirical content is possible through multiple abstractions from sensory particulars and (2) the intentional nativist picture in which empirical content is possible through our already having intentional contents in our mind/brains. Neither of these pictures answer the how-possible question, because they leave anxieties about empirical content. They attempt to answer Zeno's paradox of the stadium by walking across the stadium, where Mcd wants to answer such philosophical conundrums by showing that that which makes empirical content seem impossible is actually the product of a philosophical skepticism that we need not accept. <br /><br />Part of the answer to this philosophical skepticism is to adopt Kant's distinction between spontaneity and receptivity and concepts and intuitions. Let's review what Kant says about these in the Inaugural dissertation. The Inaugural Dissertation 1770: Kant introduces the key distinction between intuitions and concepts, and introduces the distinction between sensation and the intellect, and introduces the distinction between phenomena (things as they appear) and noumena (things as they are). Also, in a Letter to Herz (1772): claims that the whole secret of metaphysics is to explain how intellectual concepts which neither produce their objects nor are produced by their objects nevertheless necessarily apply to such objects. Thus, even before the first critique, Kant has a distinction between intuitions and concepts. But, what is this distinction. Intuitions: our ability to receive representations, i.e., our receptivity in experience; intuitions are products of sensibility and the sensible grounds of empirical knowledge. Concepts: our ability to cognize an object through these representations, i.e., our spontaneity in experience; concepts are rules of the understanding. It is unclear whether McDowell would accept this characterization of Kant's distinction. More needs to be said later about what McDowell's notions are, and how faithfully they map onto Kant's notions. <br /><br />But, for McDowell, regardless of the particular interpretations of intuitions and concepts, Kant’s Dictum is central for McDowell: “Thoughts without content are empty; intuitions without concepts are blind” (A51/B75) It pays to compare this notion with something that Aristotle "writes" in De Anima: The mind which is actively thinking is the objects which it thinks.<br /><br />Let's focus more particularly on intuitions. Intuitions relate to objects as singular terms to objects; intuitions “relate immediately to the object and is singular.” This raises several questions. Are intuitions directly referential non-conceptual representations? Kant suggests that intuitions are phenomenal presentations of objects in sensibility, but nota bene the dictum at A51/B75. Let's focus more particularly on concepts. Concepts relate to objects as general terms to objects. ‘Concept’ “refers to [the object] mediately by means of a feature [or marks] which several things may have in common.” Are concepts purely descriptive non-sensible representations? <br />Kant suggests that concepts are rules for the application of general terms to objects, but nota bene the dictum at A51/B75. In each case, intuitions and concepts are not defined in terms of each other, so they are distinct in some respect, but the Kantian dictum forces us to see them as together in judgment. So, we need to ask, is there an interdefinability problem in Kant's notions of intuitions and concepts? Is there the same problem in McDowell's notions of intuitions and concepts? <br /><br />Throughout the lectures, we'll call the Kantian dictum the Togetherness Principle (TP). McDowell calls this the Kantian Dictum, but principles are easier to assess than dictums. The interdependence of intuitions and concepts. The togetherness principle may show that intuitions are not independent of concepts and concepts are not independent of intuitions.(Sellars (1968) and McDowell (1994)). But, we are forced into an oscillation then, because if we stress the independence too much, then we have to reject the togetherness principle. If we stress the togetherness principle too much, then we have to reject independence. In a way, this is the problem of intentionality. But, I should say that there are other passages can contradict the togetherness principle (check out Hanna's recent book on the topic): “objects can indeed appear to us without necessarily having to be related to functions of the understanding” (A89/B122); <br />“appearances can certainly be given in intuition without functions of the understanding” (A90/B1222); “the manifold for intuition must already be given prior to the synthesis of the understanding and independently from it” (B145).<br /><br />Some have argued that these passages are consistent with the Kantian Dictum because the Kantian Dictum applies only to objectively valid judgments. Objectively validity is what furnishes the “conditions of the possibility of all knowledge of objects” (A89/B122). This would suggest that Kant thought there where empty concepts and blind intuitions that were not objectively valid (Bermudez (2003)). But, Kant might argue that such non-conceptual intuitions and non-intuitional concepts may be theoretically problematic and empirically useless. Further, McDowell will argue in Lecture III that non-conceptual content is problematic on several grounds. This debate about conceptual and non-conceptual content still continues and is probably the most rigorous debate emerging out of Mind and World. But, it should be said here that if Kant thought that the Kantian dictum was meant to insure objective validity, then McDowell is correct to borrow it in the way that he does, because the "objective purport" of empirical content is his main concern. But, how is this knowledge of the external world possible? (I'm here slumming with the term 'external,' not something that McDowell would do...)<br /><br />How is Knowledge Possible? Notice that Kant asks how-possible questions about neither relations of concepts nor applications of empirical concepts. It is not difficult to explain how we know that all cats are animals; it is not difficult to explain how we know that a particular has a property, e.g., Spacetime (my cat) is a cat. The central how-possible question is how is synthetic apriori knowledge possible? How does this relate to McDowell’s question: “How is empirical content possible?” McDowell’s “How Possible” Question: How is empirical content possible? Assuming that the tribunal of experience (Quine 1956) is exhausted by sensory transactions then how is it possible that thought can have any bearing on the world? What is the obstacle to our making sense of thought bearing on the world? What makes empirical content possible?<br /><br />There are two answers that trouble McDowell. I close this post with a summary of the intolerable oscillation. The interminable oscillation is between the Given on the one hand and coherentism on the other hand. On the one hand, the idea that empirical content can be understood solely in the logical space of nature (what McD calls 'bald naturalism'). On the other hand, the idea that empirical content is different in kind (sui generis) from empirical description (what McD calls 'rampant platonism'). In the next post, I will try to summarize the oscillation...<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-6064013963860892928?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-87528058207280056252009-04-16T12:46:00.000-07:002009-04-16T13:04:08.498-07:00Keeping Humpty Dumpty on the Wall: A Critique of Brandom’s Inferentialist ReliabilismI'm presenting this paper on May 1st at University of Waterloo. I would appreciate any comments or criticisms. <br /><br />Keeping Humpty Dumpty on the Wall: Brandom’s Inferentialist Reliabilism<br /><br />“And how exactly like an egg he is!” she said aloud, standing with her hands ready to catch him, for she was every moment expecting him to fall. “It’s very provoking,” Humpty Dumpty said after a long silence, looking away from Alice as he spoke, “to be called an egg –very!” “I said you looked like an egg, Sir,” Alice gently explained. “And some eggs are very pretty, you know,” she added, hoping to turn her remark into a sort of compliment. “Some people,” said Humpty Dumpty, looking away from her as usual, “have no more sense than a baby!” <br />— Lewis Carroll from Through the Looking Glass, Ch. VI<br /><br /> In Sellars’s “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind,” Sellars outlines the conditions upon which a non-inferential observation report expresses knowledge that an object is green: “not only must it be a symptom or sign of the presence of a green object in standard conditions, but the perceiver must know that tokens of “This is green” are symptoms of the presence of green objects in conditions which are standard for visual perception” (1956: 75). The first condition for knowledge is a type of reliability condition, because <This is green>. [I will use triangular brackets to mark the contents of non-observational reports to abstract from the two possible tokens Sellars has in mind, i.e., Mentalese and natural language tokenings. This distinction does not arise explicitly until Sellars’s later work, but the resources for the distinction are already present in “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind.”] needs to be a reliable symptom of a green object. The second condition is a type of reportability condition. An observer of green must not only be able to be aware of her reliability, but she must actually report that she is reliable. [The distinction between reporting roles and expressing roles is pivotal to Sellars’ construal of mental states (1956: §14-15). The reportability condition is motivated by the intuitive idea that if one is sapiently aware of a perceptual state, then one is likely to be able to report upon that perceptual state. For example, if one says, “This is green” about a green object, then one is expressing the perceptual state of seeing green. If one says “I think (it seems to me that) this is green” then one is both expressing one’s sapient awareness of seeing green and reporting one’s perceptual state of seeing green. By denying the consequent above, if a subject is not able to report upon her perceptual states, then she does not have sapient awareness of those states. This is largely inspired by Rosenthal’s (2005) reading of Sellars’s view of the distinction between expressing role and reporting role.] Both Robert Brandom (1994: 215-217, 1995, 1997: 152-162, 2000: 104, 2004) and John McDowell (1997: 161) think one or another of these conditions is too stringent. <br /><br />Brandom thinks the reportability condition is not necessary (in Sellars’s form). [I suggest below, however, that there is an implicit reportability condition in Brandom’s view.] Instead, Brandom thinks that one can augment the belief condition of traditional JTB accounts of knowledge such that a reliable tokener of <green> comes to have the normative status of knowledge without requiring that she be aware of her reliability. Brandom modifies the reliability condition by bolstering the credence of belief, meaning, that the belief is inferentially articulated and so tied to truth-conditions. A reliably tokened perceptual report of <green> is sufficient for knowledge. Brandom’s position will be called inferentialist reliabilism.<br /><br />McDowell thinks that the robust Sellarsian version of the reportability condition is not necessary, but that a modified dispositional version of the reportability condition is necessary. Further, McDowell suggests that Brandom’s inferentialist reliabilism is not sufficient to guarantee knowledge because his position does not guarantee truth. [McDowell’s account might be read as elucidating a possibility Sellars rejects, i.e., that the knowing-that claim in the reportability condition be cashed out in terms of knowing-how, pace Sellars’s suggestion that K-how presupposes K-that (1956: 75).]<br /> <br />In this paper, I hope to achieve four separate ends. First, I will explicate Brandom’s inferentialist reliabilism as a response to Sellars’s internalist reliabilism. Second, I will criticize Brandom’s reliabilism as failing to “Humpty Dumpty” on a wall between two positions: indicator reliabilism and internalist reliabilism. Third, I will diagnosis the problem for the inferentialist reliabilist’s attempt to straddle the wall between these two positions. Fourth, and finally, I will offer an emendation to inferentialist reliabilism through concentrating on the possibility of building the wall up from the side of internalist reliabilism. A notion that is basic to internalist reliabilism— the notion of seeming-to-perceive—will be shown to be necessary to produce a plausible inferentialist reliabilism. Inferentialist reliabilism can be saved if Brandom incorporates a notion of experience along the lines of McDowell’s two-tiered episodes of knowing. But first, I engage in some name-calling. <br /><br />Sellars’s position is a type of internalist reliabilism, in which for one’s perceptual state of <seeing green> to be observational knowledge, one must infer that one has been and is (occurrently) a reliable tokener of the concept green in standard conditions. In Sellars epistemology, perceptual experience contains claims that a subject may or may not endorse. The endorsement of perceptual experiences are observational reports upon such experience. A perceptual experience of seeing is actually a seeming-to-see, rather than simply a purely causal relationship between a bare particular and a subject. In this respect, Sellars issues a “level-ascent requirement” (deVries and Triplett (2000: 82-3)) upon episodes of knowing— a putative knower must do more than reliably report a green object. They also must have general worldly knowledge and linguistic understanding. Episodes of knowing are not mere productions at the end of a reliable process, but generally must be construed as inhabiting the social practice of giving and asking for reasons. <br /> <br />Brandom thinks that Sellars requirement upon perceptual knowledge “perhaps goes too far” (1997: 157). As Brandom reads Sellars’s view, under internalist reliabilism, a reporter cannot be credited with knowledge unless she can offer an inferential justification of her belief. In opposition to the level-ascent requirement, Brandom claims, “it is enough that the subject of knowledge be reliable to be entitled to a belief (without having to be able to cite that reliability as a reason for it)” (1995: 906). Elsewhere, Brandom asks, “why isn’t it enough that the attributor of knowledge know that the reporter is reliable, that the attributor of knowledge endorse the inference from the reporter’s responsive disposition noninferentially to apply the concept red to the thing’s (probably) being red? Why should the reporter herself have to be able to offer the inferential justification for her noninferential report?” (1997: 159). [It is not clear that Sellars thinks that one has to provide an “inferential justification,” but simply know that they are reliable. An occurrent requirement for an inferential justification may be too strong, as it might be possible to see the transition from reliability to knowledge that one is reliable as evincing a transition from sentient awareness to sapient awareness.] What is Brandom proposing instead? <br /><br />Brandom’s reliabilism might be best read as applauding two insights of historical epistemological reliabilism. The first insight (The Founding Insight) is that knowing does not require knowing that you know— reliably-formed beliefs qualify as knowledge even though the subject cannot justify that belief herself. The second insight, (Goldman’s Insight) involves the idea that processes are reliable relative to the contexts of belief, i.e., relative to reference classes for the particular process under consideration.<br /><br />As Brandom (2000: 115) points out, Goldman showed that the justification condition for knowledge cannot either reduce to the causal antecedents of one’s beliefs (e.g., in the barn facade case, being caused by an actual barn is not sufficient to produce knowledge in cases where there are relevant alternatives in the reference class.) nor one’s internal ability to justify one’s inferences based upon one’s perceptual states. For Brandom, a putative knower’s justification is “external to the subject’s beliefs and to their connection to their causal antecedents” (2000: 115). According to Brandom, one’s love of reliabilism, however, should not lead one to either (1) a denial of the need for classical accounts of justification that rely upon reasons (evincing a Conceptual Blindspot) or (2) a reliance upon natural scientific inquiry at the expense of traditional JTB epistemology (evincing Naturalistic Blindspot). [My criticisms of Brandom’s view are not based upon a belief in either of these blindspots. I agree with Brandom that reliabilism should not imply either position.] What can inferential reliabilism do for us then? <br /> <br />Inferential reliabilism enables us to ascribe knowledge to people that Sellars’s model of reliabilism would rule out as episodes of knowing. Brandom uses several different examples: the Aztec pot expert (2000: 99), the blindsight chicken-sexers (2000: 102-6), Monique and the hornbeams (1994: 219), and others. I will focus on the pottery expert. In that example a pottery expert can “reliably though not infallibly” [This is an important admission for Brandom. There are contextual treatments of relative alternatives that are resolutely infallibilist, e.g., David Lewis’s position in “Elusive Knowledge.”] tell the difference between Toltec and Aztec potsherds. She simply “finds herself believing that some of them are Toltec and others Aztec” (2000: 98) and has a great success rate. She also denies that she is reliable and looks for confirmation before reporting her evidence in journals. Brandom thinks that if her colleagues find that her “gut reactions” are reliably tokened, (because they endorse the material inference from particular observations), then it is reasonable to say that she knows that a pot is, for instance, Aztec. Knowing that one knows is not necessary for knowing, because in this case the pottery expert knows, but doesn’t believe that she knows. [Notice that all that Brandom requires of the transition from reliability to knowledge is that accidental true belief or epistemic luck be ruled out.]<br /> <br />Why does Brandom want to say that the pottery expert knows in this case? If a subject has a differential response disposition to token <Aztec> in the proximity of actual Aztec potsherds, then the subject has gained the concept of <Aztec>. Perception, for Brandom is a special type of transition from one level— reliable dispositions to respond— to another level— the space of reasons in which the pottery expert submits a conceptualized report. It is not sufficient that one be a sentient creature that reliably responds with <Aztec> when Aztec potsherds are around, for example, as a parrot that has been trained to utter <Aztec> might accomplish. One must also be able to make a language entry transition or move. [Brandom describes perception as a language entry transition. This derives from Sellars discussion of language games: he talks variably about “conditioned response to (x)” (1963: 314); “learned transition” where the stimulus is meant by a response within a game (1963: 329); “learn to respond to the same situation” (1963: 343). What type of learning does Sellars have in mind? Also, is Brandom's notion simply Sellars’s notion? How do they differ? My big worry is that if language entry moves (observations) are entirely non-inferential (1994: 235), then how do they become moves for the subject. A claim about experience must be about a present state of a subject, not a mere move in a logical space.] Language entry transitions are pivotally important moves in the game of giving and asking for reasons about perception. For Brandom, perception and perceptual report is a move that an individual makes by reporting observations that express conceptually articulated beliefs. <br /><br />Language entry transitions are perceptual beliefs that may or may not be justified in the space of reasons. For instance, the claim that the pottery expert makes, i.e., “That’s an Aztec potsherd” is only reliable (and therefore knowledge) if it is justified by similar types of material inferences made in practice with Aztec pottery around. In order for the pottery expert to possess knowledge, three conditions have to obtain. The pottery expert’s colleague must (1) attribute a commitment (a belief), (2) attribute an entitlement (a justification), and (3) undertake a commitment (a belief in her reliability) (1995: 903-4). It is not necessary for the attributee to possess a commitment or undertake an entitlement in order to possess knowledge—coming by the belief by a reliable process is sufficient. <br /> <br />Episodes of knowing by reliable belief-forming processes are credited with their normative status as knowings based upon the material inferences that sapient creatures make in practice. There is an institution of normative statuses that would justify attribution of knowledge to someone who is a reliable tokener of <Aztec>. As Brandom points out, “what matters is that they be the outcome of a reliable belief-forming mechanism—one whose output is likely to be true” (1995: 896). [The “likely” is problematic. McDowell (1995: 881) points out that reliability can only provide for approximate objectivity—cannot wrench objective purport from something approximating objective purport. It’s like trying to make epistemic bread out of non-epistemic ingredients.]<br /><br />Someone might ask (in a naturalistic spirit), “Why aren’t such reliable belief-forming mechanisms external to the space of reasons?” Brandom recoils from this suggestion since all sapient beliefs are articulated as states or episodes inside the space of reasons (and/or concepts). Brandom thinks that so long as the states or episodes are conceptually articulated by creatures within the practice of giving and asking for reasons, reliability should be sufficient to guarantee knowledge. <br /><br />One way to clarify what Brandom has in mind is to show that Brandom thinks a plausible reliabilism about observational knowledge should attempt to avoid two unsatisfactory views: (1) indicator reliabilism and (2) internalist reliabilism. <br /><br />Indicator reliabilism is basically the thermometer model of knowledge outlined by David Armstrong: “perception is nothing but the acquiring of knowledge of, or, on occasions, the acquiring of an inclination to believe in, particular facts about the physical world, by means of our senses” (1961: 105). [It pays to recognize also that Armstrong takes consciousness of one’s mental states to be a type of higher-order perception. We perceive that we are seeing and that is what constitutes our seeming to see X. This has given rise to self-monitoring models of consciousness.] Brandom does not want his view to reduce to this type of view. Internalist reliabilism is Sellars’s position (and McDowell’s position) that knowing via a reliable tokening of <that is green> implies knowing that (in a sense to be discussed further below) one is a reliable tokener of <that is green>. <br /><br />Brandom’s position might be read as trying to sit comfortably between these two views. Brandom takes reliability from indicator reliabilism, while trying to distinguishing sapient knowings from sentient knowings* [I’ll use an asterisk to mark non-human animal states.]. Brandom elucidates what is distinctive about sapient awareness from internalist reliabilism while rejecting that second-order knowledge is necessary. <br /><br />The “joint determination” (1994: 235) both causal and conceptual that Brandom discusses in making sense of language entry moves seems to make his position straddle between reliability and minimal acknowledgement of reliability. Assume we are talking about a human being seeing a red patch. Then, perceptual observations may be reliable seeings (and thus possibly non-sapient knowings for Brandom) or reliable sapient seeings, i.e., seemings-to-see. But, if the latter, then why would a conceptualized content fail to be accessible to sapient consciousness? If seeing is sufficient, then what does sapient consciousness matter? If seeming-to-see is necessary, then why is simply seeing an episode of knowing?<br /><br />I will argue below that Brandom’s attempt to “Humpty Dumpty” between two sides of the wall while perched on the wall of inferentialist reliabilism leads him to fall upon either side. And. rather than attempt to put him back together as an indicator reliabilist or an internalist reliabilist, I will attempt to build a better wall for him to sit upon. The resolution comes through a distinction between seeing, expressing, and sentience, on the one hand, and seeming-to-see, reporting, and sapience on the other. It will be suggested that Brandom falls off the wall because of his lack of a robust theory of experience.<br /> <br />Why might Brandom’s view be construed as a type of indicator reliabilism? It is possible to show that chief problem that indicator reliabilism faces crops up in Brandom’s reliabilism. One problem for indicator reliabilism is that one cannot distinguish a thermometer or a parrot that has knowledge from a human being that has knowledge. The trouble comes in the difference between a sentient Parrot “report” <Aztec> and a sapient report <Aztec>. <br /> <br />Brandom’s view provides us with the problem of construing what exactly is tokened by the reliable process in question. Is it a bird-belief* or human-belief? Brandom points out that the claim that putative knowers may be construed as thermometers or parrots is “a bit cavalier” (1995: 896). He asks, “What is the difference between a parrot who is disposed reliably to respond differentially to the presence of red things by saying “Raawk, that’s red” and the human reporter who makes the same noise under the same circumstances?” (1995: 897).<br /><br />Brandom just points out that what matters is “how one distinguishes concept use from nonconceptual activity” (1995: 896). Since the pottery expert is a sapient creature, i.e., one that says “We,” the difference between her beliefs and the parrots beliefs* is that her belief condition also satisfies an implicitly contained understanding condition. She inhabits the space of reasons and so understands what she is saying. Parrots inhabit the space of nature and their reports* merely happen to them. <br /><br />This, however, does not resolve Brandom’s dilemma. One cannot merely say, “It’s a special kind of belief” unless the putative sapient belief can in practice be distinguished from the sentient belief. Why should I attribute to the Potsherd expert a sapient belief? In the discussion of the case, there is nothing keeping me from attributing a brute sentient state to the pottery expert except Brandom’s insistence that she is the type of organism that is prone to inhabit states that sapient creatures inhabit. And, if the parrot exhibits the same degree of reliability (and that is sufficient for knowledge), then why could I not attribute knowledge* to the parrot? And if reliability is sufficient for the parrot, then why would I not attribute knowledge* to the pottery expert?<br /><br />In fact, there seem to be occasions in which it is more reasonable for me to attribute a non-sapient state. Assume that the Potsherd expert were to reliably discriminate between Aztec and Toltec with 100% success throughout her entire career, but continued to “not believe that she is a reliable noninferential reporter of Toltec and Aztec potsherds” (2000: 98). Should we think she is rational and/or sapient in Brandom’s sense? Should we think that she is reporting on her seeing or merely expressing her seeing? The difference is subtle, but extremely important. If the answer to the second question is negative, then our answer to first should be negative. But, if she is merely expressing her perceptual state, then what reason do we have to attribute robust sapient beliefs to her? <br /><br />Brandom might respond that, as a sapient being, she is in the line of work of giving and asking for reasons. She can use concepts and have beliefs, can make her way about in the space of reasons, even though she cannot give reasons for her beliefs in this particular case. Brandom wants to say that the inferential articulation of those responses, the role they play in reasoning, “makes those responsive dispositions to apply concepts” (1995: 897) reports that constitute knowledge. <br /><br />How should we understand these abilities to apply concepts? One reading of such a disposition might be the following. One has the ability to apply concepts if one is in the space of reasons. But, then we need to understand in the particular case of the pottery expert whether she is reliable. It seems plausible to say that she could be reliable and have knowledge locally, meaning, there is a local possibility of a putative knower having reliably tokened a concept and not be able to give reasons. But, it seems unlikely that the pottery expert should be globally unable to provide reasons, given that that’s what locates her in the space of reasons.<br />Brandom argues that if it is likely that my endorsement of the pottery experts belief leads to truth, then my inference from her expression and reliability to knowledge-attribution— “a belief-endorsing policy is reliable just insofar as it is likely to lead to truths” (1995: 901). But, how would I, the attributor, make out such a policy? It could only be by having a mutual understanding of the concepts involved in the perceptual reports. But, as we saw above, there are reasons to see the pottery expert’s tokenings of <Aztec> merely as expressions of her reliability. As such, we might wonder if they are reports at all. However, if we consider such states reports, then why would we want to deny that the pottery expert would have an awareness of her states as being reliable. It is not as if she is non-consciously experiencing Aztec potsherds. <br /> <br />One problem with Brandom’s view is that it rules out the possibility that one at times entertains sentient perceptual states. It makes the idea of one’s sapient awareness of states basic to the states as conceptual states. This is clear in Brandom’s presentation “No Experience Necessary”: “the only sense of ‘immediate awareness’ we need in order to understand our perceptual knowledge of the world around us” (2000(online): §2) is the reliable differential responses to apply concepts. [There are theories of perception that involve an inference (conscious or non-conscious) in the transition from the perceptual state to the consciousness of that perceptual state. It is not clear, however, that Brandom considers the possibility of a non-conscious transition, because for Brandom, a non-conscious transition would be a sentient inference, and inferences are what distinguish sapience from sentience. This might keep Brandom from considering an ability that at some anthropologically prior time, had an inferential or expressive role, that came to have a reporting role, i.e., the possible inference from seeing to seeming-to-see.] To be aware of something is just to apply a concept to it, and nothing else. Brandom faces a worry that one finds oneself as a sapient creature and thus possessing full-fledged human knowledge is “a favor from the world” (1995: 878). Simply by becoming trained as a sapient creature, in Brandom’s reliabilism, a subject is guaranteed to inhabit only sapient states. This is an implausible position about sapient awareness, as it denies the idea that being conscious of a perceptual experience is thinking about it in some respect.<br /> <br />Why might Brandom’s view be construed as a type of internal reliabilism? Brandom wants to avoid the implications of internalist reliabilism, i.e., that knowledge implies knowledge that one has knowledge. We saw above, that we need to assume that a report indicates the existence of a sapient commitment; if one can make a full-fledged conceptual claim about one’s perceptual “experience” then one is likely conscious of that experience. Now, the difficulty for Brandom arises. Let’s return to the pottery expert and assume that she has a sapient belief <That potsherd is Aztec>. Now, assuming that she has had sapient perceptual states of seeing Aztec potsherds, it seems a short step to saying that she would at some point recognize, at least understand, her reliability. [If not, then learning is done blindly and equally becoming conscious is a type of blind differential response training.] <br /> <br />This should not be taken to suggest that knowledge should be considered to be internal to the perceptual state of the knower, but it also should not rule out the type of critical reflection that is distinctive of concept use. Brandom (2000(online): §1) places his position in line with the type of Davidsonian and Sellarsian position that McDowell lays out in Mind and World. It is a position that only involves a causal constraint rather than a rational constraint from experience. Every perception, i.e., every language entry transition “stands at the end of a whole causal chain of reliably covarying events, including a cascade of neurophysiological ones” (2000: 206n7). This places Brandom alongside Davidson and Sellars spinning in the void in which all that can justify a belief is another belief. For Brandom, what makes a belief true is its role in inferential practice. This raises a serious issue for the attributor of commitments to the pottery expert. <br /> <br />How does the attributor recognize a reliable belief-forming process as reliable? First, the rule that is provided for the attributor cannot fall into the two problems that Brandom faces in specifying rules in Ch. 1 of Making it Explicit. The pottery expert’s belief cannot be construed as a mere regularity, otherwise the rule may be reduced to law. If that it is possible to reduce the belief to a law, then the attributor (as was shown above) may have reason to attribute a sentient belief*. It the rule is a general explicit rule, then Brandom faces the gerrymandering problem, in which the description of the process can make any belief reliable. Also, the description that the attributor provides cannot be too general, such as “A reliable process is one that reliably produces true beliefs.” <br /> <br />What types of commitments should we attribute, i.e., what is the description of the process under which the pottery expert does have knowledge. The difficulty that Brandom faces here arises from his social perspectivalism. This position does not allow for a definite answer and the demerits of social perspectivalism fall on the attributor. The attributor will believe that the pottery expert is utilizing a reliable process and infer that she has knowledge. It is a problem for Brandom if the attributor does not (in principle) have a way to type processes accurately. At this point, relevance to reference classes will only complicate things, because it is a short step to the claim that the attributor should take that process to be reliable that she should take to be reliable specified by her context.<br /> <br />There may be a way to offer an emendation of Brandom’s view to obviate these difficulties. First, it seems correct to say that one at times achieves a normative status of a knower but for which one cannot occurrently give a reason. But, one should be able to give a reason, because one that is in the business of giving and asking for reasons is also ipso facto a semantically self-conscious being (McDowell, 1997: 162). This means that there is a transcendental requirement upon inhabiting conceptually articulated states that one has engaged in some type of semantic critical reflection, according to McDowell. That seems to be all that is required by Sellars’s reportability condition. [One could argue this by showing that knowing-that is a forming of thinking-that, i.e., making a claim about one’s experience that is directly related to the world as facts or states of affairs. The minimal thinking-that in the reportability condition could be construed as “thinking that one is reliable,” being conscious (i.e., as a type of knowing-with) of one’s reliability, where one might recognize that one is in the “in” crowd, i.e., the space of reasons.]<br /><br />What is important for Sellars and McDowell is that one make a perceptual transition from a seeing to a seeming-to-see. That is what is constitutive of sapient perceptual experience. Brandom makes the mistake of getting rid of the logic of “looks”/“seems”/“appears” for the logic of “inference X is reliable”. Instead, Brandom makes the perceptual tokenings of concepts, e.g., <green> and the awareness of perceptual tokenings of <green> merely a matter of stimulus-response dispositions. If we want to articulate reliability, then we cannot place the constraint upon outside the space of reasons. <br /><br />Brandom is merely talking in the dark when he places strong stress on a truth-requirement implicit in the concept of sapient belief. Coming to have a perceptual belief cannot guarantee truth with a mere likelihood of being true. This is why McDowell writes the following, “so far from providing a first glimpse of the world-directedness of (empirical) conceptual content, I think Brandom’s treatment of observation reports makes empirical content unintelligible” (160-1). <br />I agree with McDowell that Brandom’s reliabilism places a too huge burden on the attributor to be able to spell out the reliability of tokened contents of <Aztec>. McDowell suggests that Brandom’s perspectivalism keeps the putative reporter from being able to have a perspective on his or her own reports. We, therefore, do not get an anchor in the relationship between the reporter, the attributor and the facts they are conferring about. In order for the pottery expert and her colleagues to stand on the same normative ground, some type of semantic self-consciousness needs to be assumed. I would suggest that “it appears to one that one sees X” is prior to “one infers that one sees X”. One cannot enter and make a language entry transition in the game of giving and asking for reasons until one recognizes the game has begun, and part of recognizing and acknowledging the game is being conscious of the game in the first instance.<br /> <br />One thing we can do is keep the conversation with the pottery expert going. The putative knower says something. What does she say? Now, in answering this question, given the resources of Brandom’s reliabilism, we are forced to either turn her into a parrot (indicator reliabilism) or make the pottery expert hyper-aware of the content of what she says (internalist reliabilism). The minimal requirement of her commitment is that she must at least understand what she says. But, then why does the attributor in understanding what she says accrue a further access to the reasons for what she says? It seems clear that the possibility of the attributor and the attributee understanding what is said presupposes that each have access to reasons. To allow such access does not necessarily lead us to an interiorization of the space of reasons, rather it allows us to be aware that we are within such a space, and makes our reflection on our belief-acquisition, specifically empirical beliefs, indebted to that space. <br /><br />Brandom’s issue with Sellars, we saw, is that the putative knower on Sellars’s view is required to be able to “inferentially justify the non-inferential claim” (1994: 217). First, it is not clear that Sellars internalism requires one to be able to inferentially justify one’s report. There is a way to describe the transition from a seeing to a seeming-to-see that is either non-inferential (direct) or inferential (indirect). If we focus on seeming as a state of one’s assessments of one’s own experience in an indirect i.e., inferential way, then it seems too stringent to expect a perceiver to be able to inferentially justify one’s report. But, if we explain seeming-to-see in terms of a once-inferential-but-now-directly-accessible relationship to one’s perceptual states, then the requirement is not too stringent. It involves attributing states at the level of dispositions to respond (what is expressed non-verbally (e.g., swerving when a car door opens while biking) or verbally (e.g., trained responses of parrots (and children)) and awareness of those states at the level of reports. <br /><br />This modification signals that reports are not merely indicative of the language entry transition as a set of laws for stimulus-response mechanisms as Brandom suggests. Rather, reports are indicative of a relationship to one’s perceptual states, i.e., a relationship of being conscious of those states. And as such, they are rule-governed transitions, not law-governed transitions. But Brandom could equally respond that his transitions are not meant to be merely causal inputs and equally causal outputs. But, then he is forced to accept that reasons are something different in kind than causes in such a way that forces the pottery expert’s beliefs into the void.<br />We have seen that notwithstanding Brandom’s suggestions, experience is necessary to account for perceptual knowledge. Maybe we do not need a concept as robust as Sellars’s notion or McDowell’s (minimal?) notion, but at least some notion of semantic self-consciousness is necessary, i.e., how it “seems” (in Sellars’s sense) for one to see an Aztec potsherd. I think the strength of transcendental empiricism is in construing consciousness itself, a seeming-to-see within the space of reasons, just like any claims about experience. Even if dispositions to become conscious of perceptual tokenings have become well-worn in our mental economy, that does not mean we can spend them without reason. <br /><br />Brandom would probably not rush to accept this emendation, since the emendation implies that a theory of experience is necessary to make his reliabilism successful. As he notes in his note in Articulating Reasons, “‘Experience’ is not one of my words” (2000: 205n7) and that in using the phrase “perceptual experience” he is speaking with the vulgar. But, if his only other options are speaking with parrots or speaking to himself while spinning in the void, then speaking with the vulgar is not so bad. It may be especially charming considering he would be in the company of Kant, Sellars and McDowell. For inferential reliabilism to have objective import, i.e., to engender claims about the world, it should be explicated in a logic that implies that there is a difference between seeing and seeming-to-see, a logic that engages with the semantics of appearance talk. Any logic that incorporates that distinction guarantees that a theory of experience is necessary.<br /> <br />BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />Armstrong, D. (1961). Perception and the Physical World. London: Routledge.<br />Brandom, R. (1994). Making it Explicit Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.<br />Brandom, R. (1995). “Knowledge and the Social Articulation of the Space of Reasons” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 55.4: 895-908.<br />Brandom, R. (1997). “Study Guide” In Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 119-181.<br />Brandom, R. (2000). Articulating Reasons: An Introduction to Inferentialism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. <br />Brandom, R. (2000(online)). “No Experience Necessary: Empiricism, Non-inferential Knowledge, and Secondary Qualities” [online—www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/philo/courses/representation/papers/BrandomNEN.pdf] <br />deVries, W. and Timm Triplett (2000). Knowledge, Mind and the Given: Reading Wilfrid Sellars’s “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind” Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Co.<br />Goldman, A. (1976). “Discrimination and Perceptual Knowledge” In The Theory of Knowledge Ed. Louis Pojman. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth<br />McDowell, J. (1999). “Sellars’s Transcendental Empiricism” in Realism, Rationality and Revision Walter de Gruyter, Berlin and New York, 1999, pp. 42-51.<br />McDowell, J. (1994). Mind and World. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.<br />McDowell, J. (1995). “Knowledge and the Internal” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 55.4: 877-893.<br />McDowell, J. (1997). “Brandom on Representation and Inference” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 57.1: 157-162.<br />Rosenthal, D. (2005) Consciousness and Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press<br />Sellars, W. (1956). “Empiricism and Philosophy of Mind” In Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.<br />Sellars, W. (1963). Science, Perception and Reality. New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-8752805820728005625?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-1860226351730678322009-03-03T06:20:00.000-08:002009-03-03T06:24:28.190-08:00The Phenomenological Body Program<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Day One<br /><br /></span> This conference examines contemporary and historical phenomenological approaches to the body and embodiment and offers alternative accounts that engage with or criticize the phenomenological approach.<br /><br />Conference Program Day 1<br /><br />10:15 a.m.: Opening Remarks<br /><br />10:30–11:45 a.m.: Avram Blaker (Temple University)<br />“Higher than Facts, Lower than Essence: Ambiguity, the Body, and Objectivity in Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology”<br />Response: Matt Congdon<br /><br />12:00–1:15 p.m.: Frances Bottenberg (Stony Brook University)<br />“The Case Against Disembodying Descartes”<br />Response: Joshua Pineda<br /><br />3:00-4:15 p.m.: Maxwell Tremblay (The New School for Social Research)<br />“Coherence and Collectivity: Fanon and the Limits of the Individual”<br />Response: Bill Remley<br /><br />4:30–5:45 p.m.: Michael Brownstein (Penn State University)<br />“Does Scholarly Knowledge Ruin Bodily Knowledge? On the Relationship between Embodied Understanding and Social Theory”<br />Response: Mark Theunissen<br /><br />6:00–8:00 p.m.: Hubert L. Dreyfus (UC Berkeley)<br />“The Myth of the Pervasiveness of the Mental”<br /><p> </p>Day Two:<br /><br />This conference examines contemporary and historical phenomenological approaches to the body and embodiment and offers alternative accounts that engage with or criticize the phenomenological approach.<br /><br />Conference Program Day 2<br /><br />12:00–1:15 p.m.: Michael Butera (Virginia Tech)<br />“A Phenomenology of Sensory Loss: The Late-Deafened”<br />Response: Anna Strelis<br /><br />1:30–2:45 p.m.: Alisa Mandrigin (University of Edinburgh)<br />“Body as Subject and Object”<br />Response: Janna van Grunsven<br /><br />3:30–4:45 p.m.: Gabriel Gottlieb (The New School for Social Research)<br />“Eye, Mind, Body: Fichte on Human Embodiment”<br />Response: Karen Ng<br /><br />5:00–7:00 p.m.: Jay M. Bernstein (The New School for Social Research)<br />“Rape: Notes Towards a Moral Ontology of the Body”<br /><p><em><br /></em></p><br /><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><br /> <table id="eventdetails"><tbody><tr><td valign="top"> <span class="eventsectionlabel"><br /><br />Location:</span><br /> <p>6 East 16th Street, Rooms 906/913</p> <p><span class="eventsectionlabel">Admission:</span><br /> Free; seating is limited; reservations required by emailing </p> </td> <td valign="top"> <span class="eventsectionlabel">Contact Information:</span><br /> <p>nssrphilconference@gmail.com </p></td></tr></tbody></table><span style="display: block;" id="formatbar_Buttons"><span class="on" style="display: block;" id="formatbar_CreateLink" title="Link" onmouseover="ButtonHoverOn(this);" onmouseout="ButtonHoverOff(this);" onmouseup="" onmousedown="CheckFormatting(event);FormatbarButton('richeditorframe', this, 8);ButtonMouseDown(this);"><img src="img/blank.gif" alt="Link" class="gl_link" border="0" /></span></span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-186022635173067832?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-6073752868489684892009-02-24T08:50:00.000-08:002009-02-24T08:55:14.360-08:00The Phenomenological BodyAt the New School for Social Research, there will be a conference called <em>The Phenomenological Body</em>: Its Spaces and Limits on March 26-27th, 2009 ... <b>Dreyfus </b>is the keynote speaker. I will be working on my paper on the Dreyfus/McDowell debate on bodily awareness this month, so check back for a discussion of that debate, and in April, a report on what will hopefully be some interesting discussions with Dreyfus at the conference.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-607375286848968489?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-77503736831817269602009-02-10T13:19:00.000-08:002009-02-10T13:20:25.970-08:00new philosophers' carnival<a href="http://chaospet.com/2009/02/09/86th-philosophers-carnival/">here</a>.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-7750373683181726960?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-57988285108060306242009-01-29T18:10:00.000-08:002009-01-29T18:18:34.971-08:00The Varieties of ExperienceThe University of Glasgow Centre for the Study of Perceptual Experience is holding a conference called "<a href="http://www.gla.ac.uk/departments/philosophy/cspe/presentfutureevents/varietiesofexperienceconference/">The Varieties of Experience.</a>" McDowell fans interested in writing about McDowell's moral realism might reflect on the relationship of his moral realism to his conceptualism about perceptual experience.<br /><br />Here's the description with Descartes's snappy rendering of vision:<br /><br /><br /><img src="http://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_107212_en.jpg" alt="Image of the Senses" title="Image of the Senses" class="right" style="width: 210px; height: 259px;" /><br /><br />"In recent years there has been renewed interest in the idea that we can talk legitimately about perceptual, or perception-like experiences, that don’t relate to any of the sensory modalities, traditionally conceived: moral experiences, aesthetic experiences and experiences of agency have all been touted as perceptual, or at least, perception-like. This renewed interest has been complemented by more general work on the nature of perceptual experience.<br /><br />Under this heading, the Centre for the Study of Perceptual Experience at the University of Glasgow is holding a Graduate Conference on this subject, and we invite papers on the subject of the varieties of experience: possible topics include, but are not limited to, moral experiences and related themes in ethical intuitionism, aesthetic experiences, experiences of agency, synaesthesia and synaesthetic experiences, perceptual disorders such as blindsight, the individuation of the senses, perceptualist approaches to pain, the content and epistemological significance of moral and agentive experiences, as well as papers dealing with the nature of perceptual experience more generally."<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-5798828510806030624?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-69915007689519814332009-01-26T09:05:00.000-08:002009-01-26T09:07:19.614-08:00The Engaged IntellectA new anthology of McDowell's Essays:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/MCDENG.html?show=contents">The Engaged Intellect</a><br /><br />Table of Contents:<br /><br /><ul class="metadata"><div id="toc"><ol><h3>I. Ancient Philosophy</h3><li>Falsehood and Not-Being in Plato’s <i>Sophist</i></li><li>Eudaimonism and Realism in Aristotle’s Ethics</li><li>Deliberation and Moral Development in Aristotle</li><li>Incontinence and Practical Wisdom in Aristotle</li><h3>II. Issues in Wittgenstein</h3><li>Are Meaning, Understanding, etc., Definite States?</li><li>How Not to Read <i>Philosophical Investigations:</i> Brandom’s Wittgenstein</li><h3>III. Issues in Davidson</h3><li>Scheme-Content Dualism and Empiricism</li><li>Gadamer and Davidson on Understanding and Relativism</li><li>Subjective, Intersubjective, Objective</li><h3>IV. Reference, Objectivity, and Knowledge</h3><li>Evans’s Frege</li><li>Referring to Oneself</li><li>Towards Rehabilitating Objectivity</li><li>The Disjunctive Conception of Experience as Material for a Transcendental Argument</li><h3>V. Themes from <i>Mind and World</i> Revisited</h3><li>Experiencing the World</li><li>Naturalism in the Philosophy of Mind</li><h3>VI. Responses to Brandom and Dreyfus</h3><li>Knowledge and the Internal Revisited</li><li>Motivating Inferentialism: Comments on Chapter 2 of <i>Making It Explicit</i></li><li>What Myth?</li><li>Response to Dreyfus</li></ol><ul><li>Biography</li><li>Credits</li><li>Index</li></ul></div></ul> <div id="content-related"><ul xmlns="" class="images"><li id="cover"><img src="http://www.hup.harvard.edu/images/jackets/MCDENG.jpg" alt="Cover: The Engaged Intellect" /></li></ul><br /></div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-6991500768951981433?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-80937165906741455762009-01-26T09:01:00.000-08:002009-01-26T09:04:37.264-08:00Having the World in ViewMcDowell's Woodbridge Lectures are now available in book form with other essays:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/MCDHAV.html?show=contents">"Having the World in View: Essays on Kant, Hegel and Sellars" </a><br /><br /><br />table of contents:<br /><br /><ul class="metadata"><div id="toc"><ol><h3>I. Having the World in View: Sellars, Kant, and Intentionality</h3><li>Sellars on Perceptual Experience</li><li>The Logical Form of an Intuition</li><li>Intentionality as a Relation</li><h3>II. Kantian Themes in Hegel and Sellars</h3><li>Hegel’s Idealism as a Radicalization of Kant</li><li>Self-Determining Subjectivity and External Constraint</li><li>Sensory Consciousness in Kant and Sellars</li><li>Conceptual Capacities in Perception</li><h3>III. Reading Hegel</h3><li>The Apperceptive I and the Empirical Self: Towards a Heterodox Reading of “Lordship and Bondage” in Hegel’s <i>Phenomenology</i></li><li>Towards a Reading of Hegel on Action in the “Reason” Chapter of the <i>Phenomenology</i></li><li>On Pippin’s Postscript</li><h3>IV. Sellarsian Themes</h3><li>The Constitutive Ideal of Rationality: Davidson and Sellars</li><li>Why is Sellars’s Essay Called “<i>Empiricism</i> and the Philosophy of Mind”?</li><li>Sellars’s Thomism</li><li>Avoiding the Myth of the Given</li></ol><ul><li>Bibliography</li><li>Credits</li><li>Index</li></ul></div></ul><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-8093716590674145576?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-88284600677130072962009-01-25T07:37:00.000-08:002009-01-25T07:48:05.102-08:00the upsurge of spontaneitya paper to be presented at the central APA on the Dreyfus-McDowell debate:<br /><br />Andreas Elpidorou (Boston University): “The Upsurge of Spontaneity: The Role and Place of Merleau-Ponty in the Dreyfus-McDowell Debate.” Paper 2 in Session II-F, ‘Continental Philosophy’ (Friday 9:00 a.m.)<br /><br />Elpidorou's abstract from the proceedings:<br /><br />In a multifaceted debate between Dreyfus and McDowell, Merleau-Ponty has been unambiguously placed on the side of the former. In line with Dreyfus, Merleau-Ponty holds that conceptual activity is founded upon a pre-thematic and unreflective engagement with the world. Spontaneity, they both agree, is the result of the transformation of the non-conceptual to the conceptual. In what follows, I argue that Dreyfus's account of this transformation is only partially in agreement with the one advanced by Merleau-Ponty. More explicitly, I demonstrate that whereas Dreyfus holds that the difference between the nonconceptual and the conceptual is a difference in kind, Merleau-Ponty puts forth a more nuanced explanation of the relationship between the two: Namely, by arguing that the two differ both in degree and in kind, Merleau-Ponty does away with the exclusive dualism that Dreyfus inherits by maintaining a difference in kind, which is a radical or categorical difference.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-8828460067713007296?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-51699080694940276092008-08-26T08:54:00.000-07:002008-08-26T09:18:47.483-07:00obscure comment by Leiter...In a recent article on <a href="http://www.philosophersnet.com/magazine/article.php?id=1045">the state of the vocation</a> of philosophy in The Philosophers Magazine, Brian Leiter makes the following comment about McDowell: "There are perhaps a handful of living philosophers who can even pretend to dominate the central issues in the field – the nature of truth, knowledge, and value – like the recently deceased. John McDowell at the University of Pittsburgh stands out in this regard, though the range of philosophical opinion about his work is so wide that it is hard to see him occupying anything like the place of the recently departed. (A famous and influential philosophical naturalist, for example, refers to him as “McDarkness,” which is indicative of the extremities of opinion about his philosophical merit.)" While Leiter is correct that the range of opinion is wide, this does not mean that he will not hold a place in the canon like the recently departed, e.g., Davidson, Hempel, Lewis, Quine, Rawls, PF Strawson. The comment in parentheses shows that Leiter is not inclined to explicate "the range of opinion" but would rather focus on the negative opinion. However, instead of providing reasons for this opinion, he quotes an ad hominim remark by "a famous and influential philosophical naturalist," whose name does not appear. Fame and influence do not provide reasons, neither to accept the undisclosed figure's opinion nor to accept that 'McDarkness' is a fitting name for McDowell. That I am even considering whether I should agree with Leiter's nickname for McDowell may be a sad reflection of the state of the vocation. And, highlighting someone's nickname for McDowell doesn't indicate the extremities of opinion, but merely one extreme.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-5169908069494027609?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-62281856543511238772008-05-27T09:15:00.000-07:002008-05-27T09:27:46.188-07:00i'll be in greece, writing...<a href="http://thewillofthegods.wordpress.com/">because it is the will of the gods...<br /></a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-6228185654351123877?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-31115209778152262972008-05-06T09:47:00.000-07:002008-05-06T09:50:05.416-07:00i'm working on a paper for this contest called: "the superiority of anti-constructive naturalism" which defends McDowell's naturalismUniversity of Kentucky<br />Sixth Annual Prize Essay Competition in<br />European Philosophy from Kant to the Present<br /><br /><br />QUESTION: Is any Variety of Naturalism Superior to Others?<br /><br /><br />This topic may be addressed historically, systematically, or through any combination of these two approaches. The winning essay will receive a prize of $1000 and, upon recommendation of the selection committee, be published in Inquiry. The author of the winning essay will also be brought to the University of Kentucky in the Fall of 2009 to present it.<br /><br />The winner of the first four annual Prize Essay Competitions were Sami Pihlström (University of Helsinki), Robert Guay (Binghamton University), Helder De Schutter (University of Leuven), and Herbert de Vriese (University of Antwerp) for their essays “Recent Reinterpretations of ‘The Transcendental’ Revisited” (Inquiry 47, No. 3 [2004]), “The ‘I’s Have It: Nietzsche on Subjectivity” (Inquiry 49, No. 3 [2006]), “Nations without Nationalism” (Inquiry 50, No. 4 [2007]), and “The Myth of the Metaphysical Circle” (Inquiry 51, No.3 [2008]). The prize essay selection committee declared no winner in the fifth competition. <br /><br />Essays will be judged by a process of blind review. Submissions should be appropriately formatted for such a process, with the author's name and other identifying information appearing only on a separate cover sheet. Essays should be double spaced, in English, and no more than 8000 words in length. Past and present faculty and students at the University of Kentucky are ineligible to compete. Submissions should not have been previously published or submitted for publication.<br /><br />The deadline for submissions is March 1, 2009. Essays should be submitted in triplicate in typed (hard copy) form to Ms. Katie Barrett, Department of Philosophy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506-0027 USA. No electronic submissions please.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-3111520977815226297?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-42235139118352791722008-03-02T14:13:00.001-08:002008-03-02T14:47:18.014-08:00page 123 meme where there should be philosophySelf and World tagged me with this meme, so in the spirit of playing along...<br /><ul><li>Pick up the nearest book (of at least 123 pages) </li><li>Open the book to page 123 </li><li>Find the fifth sentence on that page </li><li>Post the next three sentences </li><li>Tag five people </li></ul><br />the nearest book is Jennan (J. T.) Ismael's "The Situated Self" which is a book I will be discussing at some point on this blog and am reviewing for Metapsychology.<br /><br />Here's the three sentences: "I have been speaking as though the problem of establishing internal relations between properties exemplified by experience of different subjects is a purely epistemic one, that is, that there are facts about whether your green experiences are like mine, but it just happens that we have no way of ascertaining them. God could tell, as we might say, were he to look. That suggestion was supported by the examples" (pg. 123).<br /><br />This passage, as you might infer from the examples mentioned is in a section on inverted spectra, which I have yet to read... so I will not comment on it.<br /><br />But, it occurs to me that quoting passages out of context is a strange practice. And this type of practice is of a piece with strange fascinations with lexical pastiche, numerology, and hypertext connections. If I didn't think it would inspire a Pynchonesque paranoia in readers I probably wouldn't engage in it, but in the hopes that a strange emergent phenomena will spring from this...<br /><br />The other books that might have been in the running, but I wasn't touching them at the time (ha... "the nearest book," as if there isn't always one in my hands...): Campbell's "past, space and self" (a must-read); Lycan's "consciousness and experience" (a don't-read); and Hurley's "Consciousness in Action" (an absolutely-must-read)...<br /><br />Anyway, I hereby tag: <a href="http://duckrabbit.blogspot.com/2007/10/book-sale.html">duckrabbit</a>; the <a href="http://thespaceofreasons.blogspot.com/">space of reasons</a>; <a href="http://grundlegung.wordpress.com/">grundlegung</a>; <a href="http://broodsphilosophy.wordpress.com/">a brood comb</a>; and <a href="http://onemorebrown.wordpress.com/">philosophy sucks</a>.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-4223513911835279172?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-66911184229160150652008-02-11T08:42:00.000-08:002008-02-11T09:02:16.901-08:00another hiatusi apologize for the recent most prolonged hiatus from spontaneity&receptivity. i have been writing my dissertation and have not been focusing as much on McDowell as i had originally planned. i intend to return to commentary on McDowell as time affords... another reason for my hiatus is my recent travels exploring first nature and bodily intentionality...<br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bp3.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_QRNgywI/AAAAAAAAACk/NCKNunvtFoc/s1600-h/4+ice+climbing.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer;" src="http://bp3.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_QRNgywI/AAAAAAAAACk/NCKNunvtFoc/s200/4+ice+climbing.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5165768690068671234" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_QxNgyxI/AAAAAAAAACs/uAdRNV1wpH8/s1600-h/5+ice+climbing.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer;" src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_QxNgyxI/AAAAAAAAACs/uAdRNV1wpH8/s200/5+ice+climbing.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5165768698658605842" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bp3.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_RRNgyyI/AAAAAAAAAC0/NahcEZPqImY/s1600-h/6+ice+climbing.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer;" src="http://bp3.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_RRNgyyI/AAAAAAAAAC0/NahcEZPqImY/s200/6+ice+climbing.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5165768707248540450" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_RxNgyzI/AAAAAAAAAC8/Gpxm5v5Wd7M/s1600-h/16+ice+climbing.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer;" src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_lfOtaaMROGk/R7B_RxNgyzI/AAAAAAAAAC8/Gpxm5v5Wd7M/s200/16+ice+climbing.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5165768715838475058" border="0" /></a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-6691118422916015065?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-36368673945823219302007-11-28T14:59:00.000-08:002007-11-28T15:04:54.808-08:00mcdowell and dreyfus responses on "the myth of the mental"It’s been a long time coming, but I’m wrapping up my running commentary on the McDowell/Dreyfus debate by commenting on both responses. After which, there will be an blog-afterparty over at Gabriel’s blog “<a href="http://selfandworld.blogspot.com/">Self and World</a>” where the McD/D debate is also discussed.... <br /><br />“Response to Dreyfus” by McDowell<br /><br />What still remains unclear in this debate is McD can discuss mindedness in terms of an activity, rather than as detached from activity. D. doesn’t understand what it means for mindedness to be involved in an activity UNLESS it can be observed phenomenologically to be present in the activity. The proper response is registered here, because McD explains how the actualization of a concept in action (the intention in action) might be realizing the concept: “Realizing such a concept is doing the thing in question, not thinking about doing it” (367). <br /><br />McD is correct in arguing that the Knoblauch case “cannot show that mindedness is not in operation when one is immersed in embodied coping. When Knoblauch still had the bodily skill that he lost, his mindedness was in operation in exercises of his skill. His throwing efficiently to first base was his realizing a concept of a thing to do” (367). <br /><br />McD seems to accuse D. of a subpersonal/personal level conflation in that D. is comfortable with a bodily limb realizing means-end reasoning, whereas, McD wants to preserve the idea that an agent moves her limb, the limb doesn’t move the agent. As I said in an earlier post, D. does talk as if perception and action can be described as bubbling up from the level of solicitations of absorbed bodily coping to the level of experience. <br /><br />McD’s point against D.: “I am the only person-like thing (person, actually) that is needed in a description of my bodily activity. If you distinguish me from my body, and give my body that person-like character, you have too many person-like things in the picture when you try to describe my bodily doings. And the need Dreyfus thinks there is for this awkward separation of me from my body reflects a conception of mindedness that I think we should discard.” Again, this is to show that any subpersonal/personal level explanations that attempt to register what the body does in perception or action as opposed to what the individual does in perception or action as distinct is just replicating Cartesian dualism, specifically property dualism...<br /><br />The basic differences between D. and McD are the following:<br /><br />(1) D. maintains a dualism between the unreflective bodily engagement cast in terms of a distinction between solicitations and affordances or between bodily schemas and intellectual activity, whereas McD does not maintain this dualism, instead insisting that engagement with affordances is a form of spontaneity engaged with receptivity in operation. The practical form of spontaneity for McD is neither means-end reasoning qua inference-making nor after-the-fact justification/rationalization of such action, but instead intention-in-action, elucidated further <a href="http://www.uctv.tv/search-details.asp?showID=11509">here</a>. <br /><br />(2) D. maintains a subpersonal/personal distinction which is theoretical in the sense that the bodily schemas represented in NCC are the source and allow for the emergence of CC which is at the level of reflective thinking, since D. continues to infer from CC to reflective thinking— attending, focusing, etc., whereas McD does not create this distinction and would rather remain at the commonsense personal level, even for non-human animals...<br /><br />“Response to McDowell” by Dreyfus<br /><br />First, readers should read note 1 carefully, in which D. admits that H. did think there is an as-structure to coping, and McD is charged with a phenomenological point that this requires concepts, but McD’s point is not phenomenological, but instead transcendental. I cannot make this point here, but it should be noticed that a card-carrying Kantian might think that the phenomenology that D. tends to engage is problematic since introspection confuses the level of reflection in inner sense with the level of transcendental psychology (cf. Anthropology AA VII: 133). Regardless, what McD is concerned with is what must be there in order to make sense of such coping being human coping, not coping (absorbed or not absorbed) of a reflecting phenomenologist. <br /><br />In a sense, this is actually closer to H.’s point, since what must be in order to is really being as being. D. nevertheless still continues to suggest that demonstrative concepts are occurrently applied in active coping, rather than dispositionally applied, and so rules out McD’s position. But, the point that McD makes over and over in Mind and World and elsewhere is that if the content of experience CAN be characterized with demonstrative concepts, then there is no reason to think it is not conceptual. <br /><br />D. makes an interesting turn in talking about capacities since this solves the worry above: Capacities are exercised on occasion, but that does not allow one to conclude that, even when they are not exercised, they are, nonetheless, ‘‘operative’’ and thus pervade all our activities. Capacities can’t pervade anything, D. argues. So, to describe the status of concepts that are somehow ‘operative’ even when they are not ‘experienced’ as operating, McDowell introduces the technical term ‘conceptuality’ (p. 1). In a way, however, this makes D.’s account of the Aristotelian notion of capacity or ability very important in that if the conceptual is an activity, then D. is merely assuming that activity cannot be operative or cannot be in the realm of facts or states of affairs. <br /><br />But, McD allows them in, so, we have another difference between them. This can become clearer if we notice that McD’s notion of Aristotelian activity/capacity as it is developed in the concept of second nature is a dispositional account. Maybe this entire point is also related to the question of whether D. needs to describe things synchronically, because he is doing phenomenology, while McD only needs to account for the undertaking in general, rather than the occurrent undertaking of the subject. But, I’m not sure. <br /><br />Here’s D.’s subpersonal/personal conflation coming through: “The coper does not need to be aware of himself even in some minimal way but only needs to be capable of entering a monitoring stance if the brain, which is comparing current performance with how things went in the past, sends an alarm signal that something is going wrong. Then one becomes attentive to one’s performance and one is solicited by the situation to make appropriate adjustments.” (374). <br /><br />Couldn’t the same question be asked, “is this part of the phenomenology?” Unlikely... again, on 376, D. assumes that attentive experience and attendant ego must be realized as operative in receptivity, either of perception or action, but this is not necessary... I don’t want to suggest that McDowell must develop an account of dispositions, capacities, activities etc. to make the point, but it would have helped if he had just run through that Aristotelian influence as a reminder, rather than ignoring D.’s point. <br /><br />Both the “Wittgenstein on Following a Rule” paper and the “Two Sorts of Naturalism” paper could have made a lot of disagreement clearer. I think McD’s view is horizontal in the sense that his account of unreflective bodily activity is on a continuum with reflective intellectual activity, while D.’s view is vertical in the sense that his account of bodily activity is described on the level of NCC (the body) and CC (the mind), and so D.’s view preserves a dualism that McD’s doesn’t.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-3636867394582321930?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-35116221323754583822007-11-27T08:35:00.000-08:002007-11-27T08:41:08.753-08:00incomplete but potentially useful topical map of mind and worldLECTURE 1: CONCEPTS AND INTUITIONS<br />§1: Introduction of the Kantian Dictum<br />§2: the dualism of coherentist scheme and Given<br />§3: why the Given is useless for its purpose<br />§4: cooperation of spontaneity and receptivity<br />§5: active/passive and inside/outside of experience<br />§6: Davidson’s coherentism<br />§7: Private Language argument and the Given<br />§8: reiteration of oscillation<br />Afterword Part I: Davidson in Context: 1-9<br />LECTURE 2: THE UNBOUNDEDNESS OF THE CONCEPTUAL<br />§1: reiteration of the oscillation and diagnosis via inextricability of S&R<br />§2: the charge of idealism<br />§3: Wittgenstein’s fact ontology<br />§4: inner experience; outer experience<br />§5: the sideways-on picture<br />§6: inner experience and objectivity conditions<br />§7: demonstrations and the little ‘g’<br />§8: the charge of anthropocentrism<br />§9: Kant on spontaneity<br />LECTURE 3: NONCONCEPTUAL CONTENT<br />§1: reiteration of the oscillation and the conceptual<br />§2: Evans on the content of experience<br />§3: inner experience, AGAIN!<br />§4: Evans’ view, the Myth of the Given?<br />motivations for non-conceptual content<br />§5: fineness of grain argument<br />§6: belief-independence argument<br />§7: non-linguistic animals argument<br />Afterword Part II: postscript to L3: 1-5<br />LECTURE 4:<br />§1: Reiteration of the Oscillation between Davidson and Evans<br />§2: Evans’ conception of dumb animals.<br />§3: The dualism of disenchanted nature and spontaneity as sui generis<br />§4: Bald Naturalism<br />§5: Rethinking Nature<br />§6: Responsiveness to meaning and the constitutive ideal of rationality<br />§7: Aristotelian Second Nature as a remedy<br />§8: Naturalism as Second Naturalism<br />LECTURE 5:<br />§1: reiteration of the oscillation emphasizing Bildung and Meaning<br />§2: the kantian dictum of agency<br />§3: naturalized platonism and LW’s quietism<br />§4: kant on reason and nature<br />§5: kantian second nature and the ‘I’<br />§6: confusions about the conceptual...<br />Afterword Part III: Postscript to L5: 1-5<br />LECTURE 6:<br />§1: reiteration of the oscillation emphasizing rational animals<br />§2: Kant and the modern predicament of the subject<br />§3: the openness of experience and dissolving skepticism<br />§4: perceptual capacities of non-human animals and the environment/world distinction<br />§5: duplicating the “inner environment”<br />§6: Nagel and subjectivity/proto-subjectivity<br />§7: the evolution of spontaneity<br />§8: language as the repository of tradition<br />Part IV: Postscript 1-4: <br />1. Aristotle’s innocent naturalism<br />2. Brutes don’t have absolute spontaneity<br />3. language as the repository of tradition and later Davidson<br />4. tradition<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-3511622132375458382?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-40306162488928649832007-11-18T13:18:00.000-08:002007-11-18T13:23:51.549-08:00Dreyfus on The Return of the Myth of the MentalIn the intro, D. admits agreements and disagreements. He admits that McDowell rejects the baleful interpretation of Aristotle in which phronesis is overly intellectual and not situation specific.<br /><br />The basic point here that needs to be made more clearly is that in understanding the operation of phronesis in the ethical case, one needs to grasp a general principle, e.g., stealing is wrong, perceive the situation as a situation that counts as stealing and make the inference that one should not steal in this case. These stages of grasping the general, perceiving the particular, and applying the general to the particular might be situation-dependent in that the second phase is pivotal to the operation of phronesis. That is the import of McD’s emphasis on moral perception in his articles not only about Aristotle’s ethics, but also about his account of secondary qualities in his making room for moral realism.<br /><br />The explanation for a failure of bodily coping in D.’s critique is the involvement of reflection or what McD calls “reflectiveness” (82). D. says, “situation-specific mindedness, far from being a pervasive and essential feature of human being, is the result of a specific transformation of our pervasive mindless absorbed coping.” (353). D. thinks that the phenomena of bodily coping “show that embodied skills, when we are fully absorbed in enacting them, have a kind of non-mental content that is non-conceptual, non-propositional, non-rational and non-linguistic" (abstract).<br /><br />McD. rightly accusses D. of not being able to distinguish between the coping of expert humans and the engagement of non-humans with their environments. If D. thinks that the “free distanced orientation” that allows humans to be initiates in the space of reasons/concepts/freedom is not involved in the human case, then there seems to be no difference between human animals and non-human animals. D. says, “we have the capacity to step back and reflect but I think it should be obvious that we cannot exercise that capacity without disrupting our coping.”<br /><br />But, McD.’s account does not need minimizing in this way from occurrently exercising the free, distanced orientation to the capacity to exercise it, since McD is clear that spontaneity qua phronesis is a capacity or disposition to take up the posture or stance that is indicative of the space of reasons. And, in discussing the Knoblauch example, D. shows his tendency to make a real distinction between body and mind: “There was nothing wrong with Knoblauch’s body; he could still exercise his skill as long as the situation required that he act before he had time to think” (354).<br /><br />Why not say that there was something wrong with his body (for any lack of competence or tendency towards performance error is ultimately a problem of the body). Knoblauch failed to exercise his skill and ability because he was introspecting his perception of his body or trying to introspect the skill or ability, and such introspection interferes with the exercise of the skill or ability. In a sense, Knoblauch is applying a concept to the activity of throwing to first– the concept “pay attention” or “focus on the mechanics”– where that concept interferes. But, that doesn’t mean that because applying those concepts makes the activity fail that the activity is non-conceptual.<br /><br />The basic point is that D. is confusing conceptualized bodily coping and introspected bodily coping, since he thinks that McD is committed to not being able to explain the Knoblauch problem. The activation of conceptual capacities in perception or action require only that we have the capacity to take up a free distanced orientation on occasions where there is something amiss. That’s why it is a “standing obligation” (81) to reflect rather than a persistent command to reflect.<br /><br />There seems to be further evidence that D. accords the solicitations/affordances distinction in parallel with his body/mind distinction. According to D., M-P and H conceive of affordances in terms of solicitations not as affordances that are part of the world of perceivers/agents.<br /><br />The figure that D. employs shows the contrast as a difference in what McD and M-P admit into the world. According to M-P the system of solicitations brought about by attractions and repulsions are non-rational, so according to M-P they cannot be as McD puts it a rational openness to the layout of reality. Here, M-P makes openness to the world a matter of our bodily openness, but nothing else. It is interesting also, that Dreyfus details the openness that M-P allows in terms of a normative set of relations.<br /><br />Though normativity may ultimately be a matter of attractions and repulsions, why should we begin at that level of description? D.’s picture cast in terms of M-P’s notion of solicitations really rules out affordances as McD thinks of them, since it rules out legitimate spontaneity, in the sense of freedom to reflect upon one’s affordances as allowing (or disallowing) some perception or action. For D., solicitations bubble up for us into affordances, but the demands and requests of solicitations do not allow the questionability and answerability that spontaneity requires. Demands and requests are not simply brute impacts on our bodies (though they may be at a certain level of description); demands and requests sometimes afford the subtlety of response that rational questions and rational answers involve. And, D. seems to rule this out.<br /><br />D. assumes that activity in which things are going well always lacks mindedness and activity in which things are not going well always forces us into a level of mindedness involving attention, focusing, etc. But, neither of these assumptions can be made good unless we MUST think that absorbed bodily coping is non-conceptual and unless we MUST think that bodily coping actualizing conceptual capacities always involves occurrent reflection. But, neither of these seem to be legitimate assumptions.<br /><br />D. doesn’t notice adequately that these are the assumptions that make his view different from McD’s view. Instead, he says, “I can now sum up our differences: McDowell, following Kant and Sellars, claims that our ‘‘openness to the world’’ is that of subjects, rational by nature, directly open to an already determinate, rational, unified world. These subjects can then focus on and make explicit the implicit data and features their attention reveals. Following Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty, I claim that affordances can indeed be experienced as data or features in a world of facts permeated by mindedness but that this objective world and its conceptual order presupposes a preobjective/presubjective world. That world is opened up by our body’s responses to solicitations drawing it to maintain and improve its grip on what, on reflection, we take to be the determinate, unified, namable, and thinkable, objective world.” (360).<br /><br />D. continues to infer from conceptual capacities being operable in receptivity, specifically in the receptivity of unreflective bodily coping of skill-exercising experts, that this involves “paying attention” (361), but McD explicitly says it doesn’t. D. points out that M-P is committed to in his two-tiered conception of the unreflective bodily coping by way of body schemas and the ascension to the conceptualization of such intentional NCC. “The world of solicitations, then, is not foundational in the sense that it is indubitable and grounds our empirical claims, but it is the self-sufficient, constant, and pervasive background that provides the basis for our dependent, intermittent, activity of stepping back, subjecting our activity to rational scrutiny, and spelling out the objective world’s rational structure.” (363)<br /><br />But, this pictures the subject actually living in two worlds, the world in which our bodies respond to solicitations in the way of attractions and repulsions, and the world in which these solicitations are translated, deciphered, transmuted into affordances of an objective world. It is not only that D. here is making a real distinction between body/bodies on the one hand and mind/minds on the other, but also is falling into the myth of the Given, since there is notion of the data or features that are covered up by a “cryptomechanism” of perception. This is the outer boundary that characterizes the Given.<br /><br />And, D.’s reinstatement of the veil of perception is not any longer a veil of ideas, or secondary qualities, or perceptual mechanisms, but instead “indeterminate solicitations to act” (259). These indeterminacies may be theoretically necessary to someone concerned with explaining the necessary conditions of perception and action— remember, in McD’s case he fully welcomes non-conceptual content in that sense, which is just the material conditions of perception— but, D.’s attempt to make this follow from the phenomenology of perception seems absurd.<br /><br />I’m not sure why we should follow D. in thinking that the content of the experience of perception and action involves such solicitations, unless we thought it necessary to accept his two-tiered approach of bodily solicitations and rational affordances. And to read such a story into the phenomenology of that experience just seems like bad phenomenology.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-4030616248892864983?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-29973271602017097022007-11-08T13:56:00.000-08:002007-11-08T13:57:31.311-08:00mcdowell on intention in action<a href="http://www.uctv.tv/search-details.asp?showID=11509">here</a>.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-2997327160201709702?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-70934227448561044602007-11-06T07:33:00.000-08:002007-11-18T13:26:37.577-08:00McDowell on The Myth of the MentalMcD locates the charge that D. lodges against him as being that mind is pervasive in perceptual experience. The myth of the mental is supposed to be something that both M-P and H. would disagree with since M-P rejects intellectualism and H. rejects characterization of objects in terms of present-to-hand properties. <br /><br />McD responds first to the charge that unreflective bodily coping (UBC) is not a part of perceptual experience, but he only says it must be conceptual. D. thinks that rationality is situation-dependent, but McD rejects the assumption that McD thinks it is situation-independent. There is no reason why McD couldn’t agree with Aristotle’s notion of living the fulfilled life (recently quoted in a Visa commercial): Being well, or living the fulfilled life is reacting and acting towards the right persons and things, in the right degree, at the right place and time, for the right causes and reasons, in the right way. <br /><br />McD agrees fully with H’s interpretation of phronesis and rejects D.’s assumption that practical reasoning is detachable from reason in action or spontaneity. D. saddles McD with a detached conception of rationality that is neither his own nor in his interpretation of Aristotle, nor really is properly Aristotle’s. We can see this through an exegesis of the ordinary word “habit.” McD is correct to point out that D. makes the distinction between situation-dependent exercise of practical reason and the conceptual rationality which is situation-independent, i.e., either reasoning prior to an action or rationalizing posterior to an action. <br /><br />As I said in my last post, actualization of conceptual capacities, whether in perception or action are not prior, posterior or really even occurent. McD’s view of concepts is a dispositional view. McD also disagrees with D.’s charges about humans and non-human animals, saying “there are descriptions of things we can do that apply also to things that other animals can do.” Humans are open to a world and non-humans merely inhabit an environment (343). <br /><br />However, McD also makes room in this Gadamerian distinction for the idea that humans qua rational animals share affordances with non-human qua non-rational animals. Such affordance-sharing does not mean that our engagement with affordances need be understood in a two-tiered theory that D. ascribes to M-P and H and offers Todes’s account as the best exemplification. This merely assumes that there is a basic lower story captured in mere responses to a nonconceptual given that surfaces in an upper story that enables a rational openness to a world. No matter how much you fill in the details or flesh out this view, there is always the question of whether we must be committed to entertaining such a view in the first. <br /><br />Instead, it should be that the rational openness to the world is an engagement with affordances as affordances from an environment that enables a world rather than merely an environment. Grasping such affordances can be situation-dependent and allow an orientation to world which is permeated with mindedness. It is unclear what distinctive phenomenology D. is drawing on that makes it plausible to say that unreflective bodily coping is nonconceptual, in the sense that it doesn’t involve the use of concepts or rationality. Much of the problem with the debate between McD and D. is actually that McD is providing arguments (mostly transcendental) and D. is providing phenomenological descriptions, and while these two methodologies are not incompatible, the differences between their methodologies at times make them talk past each other. <br /><br />And regardless, even if we agree on what phenomena are relevant to the discussion, e.g., Chuck Knoblauch’s loss of throwing ability (if you look at his <a href="http://www.baseball-reference.com/k/knoblch01.shtml">stats</a>, there is a discernible difference between 1998-2000), speedchess players, there is still a question of whether we need to feel motivated by some non-ordinary reasons to accept that theory-building of the sort D. recommends is in order. And, reliance on phenomenology doesn’t determine this... <br /><br />Another way to put this is: just because you ask nurses, cakebakers, chessmasters, or artists etc. “are you conceptualizing, thinking, reasoning about what your doing?” in the distinctively answer-priming way, and they respond as if their hearts-in-practice modes of activity would be put in question, that “of course not,” then they have provided the transcendental argument that experience is non-conceptual. McD’s best claim in this regard is “an implication of this for perceptual content can be put like this: if a perceptual experience is world-disclosing, as opposed to belonging to the kind of coping with a mere environment that figures in the lives of creatures lacking orientation towards a world, any aspect of its content is present in a form in which it is suitable to constitute the content of a conceptual capacity” (346). <br /><br />McD also allows, however, (as he has in many other places) that there is such a thing as non-conceptual content, but that if there is it refers not to anything intentional, but to the material of perception. It is for this reason that when someone argues that McD’s account of perception and action doesn’t involve sensation, they must be confused about his view. McD admits that the matter of experience is non-conceptual and that this is what we share with non-human animals, but the form is conceptual. The difference between human sensibility and non-human sensibility is a matter of degree in the structuring of the matter of experience. <br /><br />I think McD is correct to locate another difference between he and D. in the problem that D’s phenomenological leanings give rise to: D separates the I from the experience such that the I is taken to be something which merges with “this body.” It’s not as if “this body” is has an independent character apart from oneself as embodied in general. And, regardless, D. is wrong to think that just because the M-P and H are phenomenologists, that they’ve got the phenomenology correct.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-7093422744856104460?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-30679894827324181842007-11-05T07:39:00.000-08:002007-11-18T13:29:12.991-08:00Dreyfus on The Myth of the MentalDreyfus (D) contrasts McDowell’s (McD) account with the phenomenologists Merleau-Ponty (M-P) and Heidegger (H) by claiming that their takes on existential openness to the world, both in perception and action, are not conceptual, whereas McD’s is resolutely conceptual. <br /><br />I know next to nothing about M-P, but I think D’s reasons for thinking H holds a non-conceptual view of perception and action are flawed, because ready-to-hand doesn’t mean non-conceptual, just not reflective. Dreyfus argues that the proper account of Aristotle’s notion of phronesis is not conceptual, but instead follows H’s interpretation of phronesis: <span style="font-style: italic;">“understanding that makes possible an immediate response to the full concrete situation.” </span> D. suggests that H’s interpretation does not involve concepts, reasons, or freedom even, so McD’s account is too strong. <br /><br />D. says, <span style="font-style: italic;">“in assuming that all intelligibility, even perception and skillful coping, must be, at least implicitly, conceptual – in effect, that intuitions without concepts must be blind, and that there must be a maxim behind every action– Sellars and McDowell join Kant in endorsing what we might call the Myth of the Mental.” (6-7) </span><br /><br />But, the Kantian point that concepts and intentions must be operative/actualized in perception and action does not rule out the possibility that perception and action could be automatic, fast, non-conscious, or any of the other below-the-line notions that D. employs in his examples. D. contrasts the Kantian account with examples of expertise in which reflective gets in the way, or is not involved, or doesn’t phenomenologically enter the experience. So, chessmasters move pieces automatically, quickly, without reflecting on the layout of the chessboard.<br /><br />D. wants to infer from this, <span style="font-style: italic;">“thus phenomenology suggests that, although many forms of expertise pass through a stage in which one needs reasons to guide action, after much involved experience, the learner develops a way of coping in which reasons play no role.” </span>D. is arguing that since cyclists, nurses, and chessmasters cannot express reasons for their tactical rule-following, they must not have conceptual activity going on, but instead are merely responding to the situation unreflectively. <br /><br />But, the question is: What is the best way to describe these phenomena? Must we describe such activity in terms of non-conceptual content? Must we describe such activity in terms of conceptual content? One of D.’s questionable assumptions is that the activities aren’t within the space of reasons because one is not aware of a prior intention or posterior rationalization, but that is not McD’s assumption. <br /><br />McD could freely agree with D. on the first have of this point: <span style="font-style: italic;">“These features [affordances], although available to the perceptual system, needn’t be available to the mind.”</span> According to D, the chessmasters take on the layout of reality is intentional but not conceptual, since it doesn’t involve being able to label the activity with a word. But, D. doesn’t have good reason to think that Heidegger’s account is necessarily non-conceptual? <br /><br />Further, he doesn’t have good reason to think McD’s notion of conceptual activity is ALWAYS open to reflection, rather than that its paradigm exercises are open to reflection. D. thinks that conceptual activity (in perception and action) doesn’t involve thinking, intending, noticing, attending... But, it is not clear that McD thinks it always does on robust senses of this family of terms. <br /><br />All McD has to argue is that for Heidegger and Aristotle on phronesis, the understanding required is a form of know-how and conceptualism is compatible with such know-how in a way that D. fails to allow, partly because of the conception of conceptual activity he foists on McD. And, it is not a benefit of D.’s view that he needs a theory following Todes: <span style="font-style: italic;">“a detailed phenomenological account of how our embodied, nonconceptual perceptual and coping skills open a world, and then to suggest a possible answer to how such skills could be transformed into skills with conceptual content.” <br /><br /></span>But, why think this is necessary? Why should we think that Heidegger’s ready-at-hand and present-at-hand distinction is a basing, transformative, or transactional account between the nonconceptual and conceptual? D. is trying to motivate the need to explain the relation between being-in-the-world as nonconceptual engagement and being-rational or thinking-in-the-world as conceptual activity. <br /><br />But, what motivates the need to ask what makes possible conceptual activity as based on nonconceptual engagement, unless we accept this dualism? It is really Dreyfus’ notion of thinkingly understanding that commits him to this two-tiered program, and to a form of dualism of the conceptual and merely negatively defined non-conceptual.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-3067989482732418184?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-54542603402483141622007-11-04T10:04:00.000-08:002007-11-04T10:33:36.116-08:00kant on "global representations" and McDowell's selfI just finished reading (for the second time) ch. 2 of Andrew Brook’s Kant and the Mind in which he elucidates the idea that the self of transcendental apperception, or the I-as-subject, or what he calls “a single complex representation called a global representation” (13). Brook defines a global representation as “a representation that has a number of particular representations and/or their objects or contents as its single global object” (33) and a single global representation as “an intentional object that represents a number of intentional objects and/or the representations that represent them, such that to be aware of any of these objects and/or their representations is also to be aware of other objects and/or representations that make it up and of the collection of them as a single group” (33). I don’t want to get mired in Kant scholarship, or the specifics of Brooks taxonomy that allows him to elucidate many important points in Kant’s theory of mind, but I do want to not a pivotal difference between Brooks view of the global representation and McDowell’s insistence in Lecture 5 of Mind and World what a desirable Kantian interpretation and Kantian account of the self of self-consciousness would involve. McDowell’s desire in Lecture 5 §5 is to “allow the connection between self-consciousness and consciousness of the world, which figures in an equivocal way in his thinking, to take a satisfactory shape” (99). I don’t think that Brook’s interpretation of transcendental apperception or what he calls ASA or apperceptive self-awareness allows such a desire to be realized. And one major reason for this is that Brook’s notion of a global representation cannot capture something I take to be pivotal in understanding TA and ASA. Here is a hypothesis: Kant’s notion of transcendental apperception or global representation is a worldview, or as McDowell puts it: “a singled out tract of a life” (103). We might interpret that singled out tract of a life quite generally, in the sense of a general experience or a possible experience in Kant, and then we can situate self-consciousness in a wider context, the context in which being a subject in the world requires a variety of conditions to be met: that one exists in a natural world that appears in space and time, that is partially determined by the material objects that are presented in receptivity and partially determined by actualized forms or structures of experience provided by spontaneity, and further that possessing unity of consciousness involves actually realizing a synthetic unity. This synthetic unity must capture the pivotal importance of productive imagination, which might involve enacting a procedure in which one actually traces out an ordinary path through the objective world. In this sense, being aware of oneself as oneself is not the product of a global representation in the sense in which an individualist like Brooks likes to put it (despite his desire to rid himself of commitments to homuncular functionalisms), but instead is the product of a global representation in the sense in which we creatures living this form of life, possessing these bodies, using these tools, e.g., language, pictures, hammers, dishwashers, inevitably unify our experience given these structures as conditions. In this sense, the unity of nature is prior to the unity of consciousness, and the outer limit of the unity of nature is the practice that McDowell calls “spontaneity-at-large.”<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-5454260340248314162?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-31493401908304220142007-10-27T10:08:00.000-07:002007-10-27T10:09:05.976-07:00online videos of philosophy lecturesSome very interesting links to lectures and conferences on philosophy and cognitive science:<br /><a href="http://broodsphilosophy.wordpress.com/2006/06/15/online-videos-of-philosophical-lectures/">http://broodsphilosophy.wordpress.com/2006/06/15/online-videos-of-philosophical-lectures/</a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-3149340190830422014?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-57494026128618466382007-10-26T07:32:00.000-07:002007-10-26T07:37:04.134-07:00mcdowell and vehicle externalismMcDowell thinks that it is not necessary to infer that because intentional content is externally constituted, its vehicle is necessarily external. But, McDowell’s reason for avoiding this inference from content to vehicle is his anti-scientism. He viewed the only option for a vehicle as some internal representations or cognitive processes “in the head.” Rather, his argument is really the mind is not anywhere, so the mind is not “in the head.” If there are architectures or implementation or realizations that are not “in the head,” but nevertheless enable us to make sense of the conceptual ability for self-consciousness, then we can adequately capture the Fregean picture, yet not be committed to vehicles as organs (whether material or immaterial).<br />The vehicle is only minimally individual, by which I mean it might be realized as skills and abilities of the creature. This is made available by an interpretation of Putnam’s notion of mental occurrences as the operation of skills and abilities in “Brains in a Vat”: “attempts to postulate special mental objects, 'concepts', which do have a necessary connection with their referents, and which only trained phenomenologists can detect, commit a logical blunder; for concepts are (at least in part) abilities and not occurrences. The doctrine that there are mental presentations which necessarily refer to external things is not only bad natural science; it is also bad phenomenology and conceptual confusion.” <br />Such skills or abilities that constitute self-consciousness are procedural schemata, rather than occurently realized representations. This goes against the hypothesis that self-consciousness is realized in representations in the individual, e.g., in the individual’s brain or body. <br />We benefit from not positing self-standing inner representations that allow the individual to reflexively self-refer. McDowell’s analysis of Putnam’s argument suggests that we should make room for the idea that the content of the mind, the self, the mental life, is external to the individual. McDowell’s argument suggests that the content of mental states might be conceived as external, though McDowell does not extend content externalism to the vehicles of those thoughts. <br />His suggestion comes by way of a reminder (Since McDowell hardly ever makes claims or positions, because of his desire to avoid constructive philosophy, but instead assembles reminders, so we should be hesitant in saying that he is committed to any ‘-isms.’) that on a certain interpretation of Frege’s theory of content (specifically arming Frege with the Russellian conception of singular thought), we are not forced to accept internalist assumptions about mental content. This leaves the burden of proof with the internalist to show that the mind, and an important feature of mindedness, e.g., self-consciousness, cannot be in any way external to the subject S. <br />But, the “in the head” metaphor can be difficult to deal with without a literal interpretation, so part of the hard work is making sense of what “in the head” is taken to mean. Ultimately, the desire for a literal interpretation of “in the head” makes us look for a corresponding organ for the mind to be in, whether material, e.g., the brain, central nervous system, or for Aristotle, the heart, or immaterial, e.g., immaterial substance. <br />According to McDowell, there is a confusion in the very idea of looking for a vehicle when we talk about “the mind” or “the self,” since strictly speaking the most we can achieve is that mental life “takes place where our lives take place” (281). But, as saw in §3, the position of vehicle externalism about skills and abilities might enable us to provide a more detailed account of this vague notion of “where our lives take place.” If we can supplement this notion of “where our lives take place” with where we exercise the skills and abilities that constitute self-consciousness, then we might develop an adequate vehicle externalism about self-consciousness.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-5749402612861846638?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-87636262022288383072007-10-16T14:04:00.000-07:002007-10-16T15:03:30.627-07:00abstracts from mcdowell conference in 2005<span style="font-size:100%;"><a href="http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/philosophy/news/mcdowell/">here</a>. some abstracts of papers delivered. after the conference the papers were published (with other papers whose abstracts are missing here) in </span> <a href="http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bpl/ejop" title="European Journal of Philosophy">European Journal of Philosophy</a>, Volume 14, Number 2, August 2006.<br /><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Michael Williams <span id="afterPageTitle"></span></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --><span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><!--StartFragment--><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong><span lang="EN-US" style="font-size:10;">Science and Sensibility: McDowell and Sellars on Perceptual Experience</span></strong></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size:100%;"><span lang="EN-US" style="font-size:10;">John</span> <span lang="EN-US" style="font-size:10;">McDowell</span><span lang="EN-US" style="font-size:10;">’s <em style="">Mind and World</em> has three main elements: a problem, its solution and an account of the deep background to the problem that explains why McDowell’s solution is either not considered or dismissed.<span style=""> </span> In developing these elements—and particularly with respect to the first two—McDowell generously acknowledges his debts to Sellars, though he also puts forward some serous criticisms of Sellars’s final position. So how close are Sellars and McDowell.<span style=""> </span> A case can be made that they are very close, especially if<span style=""> </span> we look beyond <em style="">Mind and World</em> to McDowell’s Woodbridge Lectures.<span style=""> </span> We can, it seems, find Sellarsian anticipations of all three elements in McDowell’s view.<span style=""> </span> But appearances are misleading.<span style=""> </span> Sellars and McDowell are at odds in fundamental ways, and their differences spring ultimately from deeply divergent conceptions of the task of philosophy in our time.</span></span></p><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Kenneth Westphal <span id="afterPageTitle"></span></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --><span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong>Contemporary Epistemology: Kant, Hegel, McDowell</strong></span></p> <!--StartFragment--><!--StartFragment--><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style=";font-family:";font-size:11;color:black;" lang="EN-GB" >McDowell and I agree that (1) we need a socio-historically grounded epistemological realism; (2) Kant’s and Hegel’s theories of knowledge are of extraordinary contemporary importance because they contribute so much to understanding how a realist account of human knowledge can recognize the deep and pervasive socio-historical dimensions of human knowledge; and (3) twentieth century epistemology has greatly impoverished itself by neglecting or misunderstanding Kant’s and Hegel’s epistemologies. Recently McDowell (2003) revisited Kant’s and Hegel’s views in order to ‘retrace, more carefully’ some of his remarks about them in Mind and World. I focus on McDowell’s recent statement. I argue that McDowell has not yet plumbed the core issues and views of Kant’s and Hegel’s epistemologies, and consequently has not yet recognized those aspects of their views that are most important for his own epistemological project. These include: The Co-extensiveness of Understanding and Sensibility (§2), Identity and Predication (§3), Objective Purport and Kant’s Transcendental Deduction (§4), and Proving Mental Content Externalism Transcendentally (§5).<br /><br /></span></span><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Willem deVries <span id="afterPageTitle"></span></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --><span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong>The Reflexive and the Sensory in Transcendental Empiricism</strong></span></p> <!--StartFragment--><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style=";font-size:10;color:black;" lang="EN-GB" >John McDowell is right to argue that, like himself, Wilfrid Sellars is also a transcendental empiricist (even if ‘transcendental empiricism' seems to be an oxymoron). McDowell locates the source of Sellars's transcendentalism in his rejection of atomism. I argue that in order to understand why rejecting atomism is not the same as rejecting empiricism itself, one must look closely at the specific character of Sellars's holism. This is principally determined by a set of reflexivity requirements on the linguistic, the conceptual, and the epistemic. These reflexivity requirements, in turn, are rooted in Sellars's conception of the normative. Finally, only against this background can we really see what is at stake in Sellars's and McDowell's differing treatments of the sensory.<br /><br /></span></span><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Charles Travis <span id="afterPageTitle"></span></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --><span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong>A Worldly Bearing</strong></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-align: left;" class="MsoNormal" align="left"><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style=";font-family:";font-size:11;" lang="EN-GB" >‘Representation in appearance’ is my name for this idea: for things to appear as they do in a visual experience is for things to appear as if they are a certain way; thus, for them to appear as they thus do is for it to be represented as so that things are that way—a case of truth-evaluable representation. That view is espoused in various places by John McDowell. Aside from reasons for supposing so, he has a motive: the idea is required if experience is to bear rationally on thought. (It is agreed on all hands that thought can be about the way our environment is—can have empirical content—only if experience does rationally so bear.) Against this I will argue two things. First, there is nothing in appearances of any sort to make for representation of anything as so; and there is no such representation in experience outside of our representing it to ourselves as so that such-and-such (our taking things to be so). Second, the rational bearing of experience on thought, or, more to the point, the rational bearing of the world, through our experience of it, on thought, in no way requires, nor is even facilitated by, representation in appearance. There is an idea behind this felt need for representation which can be put thus: only what is conceptually structured can bear rationally on something: rational relations are, in the nature of the case, between things conceptually structured.</span> <span style=";font-family:";font-size:11;" >But that is just not so.</span></span></p><p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-align: left;" class="MsoNormal" align="left"><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /><span style=";font-family:";font-size:11;" ></span></span></p><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Naomi Eilan <span id="afterPageTitle"></span></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --><span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong>Objectivity and Bifurcationism</strong></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="" lang="EN-GB">On one view, what gives us a grip on the idea of a mind-independent world is our commitment to its describability from no point of view. On another, what gives us a grip on the idea of a mind-independent world is our capacity to employ a primitive theory of perception, in virtue of which we think of our perceptions as explained jointly by the way the world is and our own position in it. My question is: to what extent, and in what sense, is the latter a serious alternative to the former? Some of McDowell’s most powerful arguments against the possibility of an absolute conception are extensions of his arguments about the distorting effects of combining bifurcationism about ethical concepts with appeals to the absolute conception in framing questions about the reality of ethical value. I will be suggesting that when we try and extend these arguments to similarly structured debates about the location of consciousness in the world, we see that appeal to the primitive theory only provides a serious alternative to the absolute conception if we think of the demonstratives deployed in the theory as mediated by experiences that are both world-dependent and concept-independent.</span></span></p><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Barry Smith <span id="afterPageTitle"></span></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --> <div class="content"> <span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><!--StartFragment--><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong>False Modesty</strong></span></p> <p><span style="font-size:100%;">As part of his quietism, John McDowell has long advocated a certain modesty in the theory of meaning. It should not and need not explain what it is for words and sentences to have the meanings that they do. Instead, a theory of meaning for a language must take for granted its speakers' abilities to use sentences of the language with the meanings described. Michael Dummett has argued that as an account of what it is to grasp these meanings the account is circular, and his fundamental charge is that it offers us no insight into what it is to grasp the meanings of sentences. McDowell rejects his objections on grounds that Dummett wants, per impossible, an account of what it is to speak a language given from outside language and content. I show that without endorsing Dummett's demands one can still press his objections and that we can and should try to explain what it is for our words to have the meanings they do. The recommended modesty is false.</span></p><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span><p><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span></p><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Bill Brewer <span id="afterPageTitle"></span></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --><span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong>Perception and Content</strong></span></p> <span style="font-size:100%;"><span style=";font-family:Tahoma;font-size:10;color:black;" lang="EN-GB" >It is close to current orthodoxy that perceptual experience is to be characterized, at least in part, by its representational content. I call this the Content View (CV). (CV) faces a dilemma concerning the relation between this content and the conscious nature of such experience - the fact that perception presents us directly with the constituents of the physical world themselves. I start with a paradigm case of representation in linguistic thought, and describe the ways in which McDowell qualifies it in order to capture this conscious presentation in perceptual experience. The resulting view retains two features of the starting paradigm, though, which I argue constitute a fatal obstacle to any version of (CV): first, the possibility of falsity; second the involvement of generality. Although the former is often thought to be an advantage in providing a natural description of perceptual illusion, I argue that it is neither necessary nor satisfactory in this regard. The latter involvement of generality is the source of the former possibility of falsity. I argue that it constitutes the fundamental error in (CV), by importing into the account what is rightly to be regarded as an intellectual response to what is strictly presented in perception, rather than anything essential to its basic nature.</span><span style=";font-family:Tahoma;font-size:10;" lang="EN-GB" ><span style=""> <br /><br /></span></span></span><h1><span style="font-size:100%;"> Jennifer Hornsby <span id="afterPageTitle"></span><br /></span></h1> <!-- Table for containing the centre and right columns. A table is a necessary evil so that user-created content can expand the RHS to fit, instead of falling apart. --> <div class="content"><span style="font-size:100%;"><a name="contentAnchor" id="contentAnchor" class="accessibility access-info" accesskey="c"></a></span> <p><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong>Knowledge and Action</strong></span></p> <p><span style="font-size:100%;">I'll claim that it is to the detriment of much recent philosophy of action that it fails to treat human agents as possessing knowledge. I'll connect this claim with themes in McDowell.</span></p> </div><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span> </div><p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /><span style="" lang="EN-GB"></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="" lang="EN-GB"><br /></span></span></p><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style=";font-family:";font-size:11;color:black;" lang="EN-GB" ><br /><br /></span><br /></span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-8763626202228838307?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6231553767760728968.post-42259476556479180172007-10-16T10:16:00.000-07:002007-10-16T10:30:07.119-07:00condensed summary of putnam's "Brains in a Vat"This summary is only tangentially related to Mind and World, but McDowell does say in "Singular Thought and the Extent of Inner Space" and in "Putnam on Mind and Meaning" that Putnam's discussion and rejection of the assumed magical connection between mental representations and the world both inspired McD. Ultimately, McD thinks that Putnam did not take this view far enough. It should also be noticed that in "Putnam on Mind and Meaning," McDowell offers a criticism of Putnam's narrowly conceived notion of conceptual abilities: Putnam's account "obliterates a perfectly workable conception according to which exercises of concepts are, for instance, acts of judgment, intrinsically possessed of referential bearing on the world" (1998: 289n22).<br /><br />Putnam’s response to the skeptic is generated by a form of semantic externalism. His rejection of the skeptic’s skeptical alternative relies upon the notion that the existence of meanings and concepts rules out the possibility that SK presents. Really, he is ruling out that such possible-SK can be meaningfully formulated. Putnam argues against the skeptical possibilities by arguing that if they obtained, then our concepts would be different, and thereby our beliefs would be different. Suppose, the possible-SK is that we are Brains in a Vat (BIV). If BIV is true, then I can “say” and “think” “I am a brain in a vat.” But, my words do not mean the same thing as they do if BIV is false. If BIV is false, then “I am a brain in a vat” has concepts which may have an external relation to objects in the world, for if the statement is to be false, it must be meaningful. If BIV is true, then my mental terms only refer to the images or appearances of such objects, not the objects themselves. So, if BIV is true, then when we say, “We are BIV” we are not brains in the image. If BIV is false, it is epistemically impossible that we are BIV. The claim that Putnam is making is that the hypothesis BIV is self-refuting. The self-refutation derives from the fact that the claims that people make in BIV cases, e.g., “I am an envatted brain” do not refer. This is supported by Putnam’s arguments that no piece of representation intrinsically refers, partly supported by the idea that “meanings aint in the head” or there are no intrinsically representational mental representations. if there were intrinsically referential mental representations, then the skeptic could argue that the claims made in the vat do not refer to the image or the appearances in the vat, but to actual vats, in which case the BIV cases would not be self-refuting. Putnam notes that “If we are brains in a vat, then “We are brains in a vat” is false. So it is (necessarily) false” that we are brains in a vat. So, skepticism cannot get off the ground. Possible-SK are not possibilities at all, since it is necessary that SK is false.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6231553767760728968-4225947655647918017?l=spontaneityreceptivity.blogspot.com'/></div>j matthias downoreply@blogger.com0