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I tried writing this earlier, but my neighbor was playing Alanis Morissette music.  I don’t ever think I’ve heard a woman play her music quietly.  Anyway…

1)  Our psychology is explained by the mechanisms described by contemporary evolutionary theory.

2) If our psychology is explained by the mechanisms described by contemporary evolutionary theory, then our behavior in moral situations is explained by natural selection (or genetic drift, spandrels, etc).

3) If our behavior in moral situations is explained by natural selection, then we don’t need independent moral facts to explain our behavior.

4) We don’t need independent moral facts to explain our behavior.

This is weak because it’s imprecise and empirically questionable.  But, I think there is a good argument under here as long as you 1) are a strong-ish adaptationist and 2) you think something like evolutionary psychology is true.  Let’s look at the premises:

(1):  This is obviously a given. If you don’t care much for evolutionary theory, then the rest of the argument is uninteresting. But supposing you do, then you either think it explains some limited set of facts (not including our psychology) or all of the facts about us. Of course, evolutionary theory doesn’t explain why I am me and not someone else or other trivial logical truisms. But if evolutionary theory can explain anything, heritable behavior “dispositions” or traits are perfect candidates due to the immense visibility it would have for natural selection.

(2): I don’t really know what I mean by moral situations. I suppose it would be like our moral beliefs/judgments plus the other stuff going on in our heads.  When I see some particularly heinous crime reported on television, I might find myself in an emotional state which culminates in some moral judgment: “Whoever did this deserves what’s coming to him.”  Whatever relevant psychological states and factors are in such a moral moment, that’s specifically the sort of thing that would be visible to natural selection.  I throw in a bit about genetic drift and spandrels for completeness’s sake, not because I think they are real contenders. Drift might work well in small populations, but our psychology and the underlying physical substructure that forms it are extremely complex and expensive resource-wise, and this is a telltale sign of the finagling of natural selection. One things to note here:  Sharon Street, author of the paper inspiring this post, refers to “proto” traits as the heritable traits selected by evolutionary forces.  Whether they are tendencies, beliefs (in proto form), judgments or dispositions is a little unclear.  But one thing that is certain, she wisely wants to tread the line between blank-slate-ism and nativism, especially about content.  We don’t want to think that, say, beliefs are inheritable. It must be something smaller.  I would just say that they are judgment-forming faculties and leave it at that (or rather, punt to developmental psychologists).

(3): I don’t know if this is true or not. It seems true.  If our psychology governs behavior and evolution explains behavior, then we don’t need moral facts to explain what happens in the real world. Think of it this way:

You:  Why do humans protect their own children so viciously?

Me:  [Evolutionary Explanation]

You:  But also because it’s morally right?

Me:  I dunno, maybe.

Of course, moral realism is logically compatible with this view, but it seems unlikely.  Of course, this argument hinges on us actually caring that our psychology hooks up (or would hook up) with independent moral facts.  You might be a weird error theorist and just claim that moral facts exist in Platonic heaven but it is of no consequence to us because our faculties were formed by the pressures of reproductive fitness, not rightness or wrongness.

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I’ve been gone for an embarrassing amount of time. Rather than type anything original, I’ll just note two items of philosophical interest:

The Online Consciousness Conference has put up its papers

The Phenomenal Qualities Podcast

Cheers

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I ran into this video when I was doing a bit of research into the question of women in philosophy. There are many brilliant women doing philosophy in all kinds of fields; the ratio of men to women is still higher than most of the humanities, I suspect.

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William Ramsey is the first to offer a rebuttal to Plantinga’s EAAN. While the bulk of his response focuses on Plantinga’s interpretation of evolutionary epistemology, he begins by offering an externalist semantics where not only is the structure of our beliefs visible to natural selection, but the content of our beliefs is visible to natural selection. You’ll remember that Plantinga’s major step in this argument is the plausibility of semantic epiphenomenalism, where SE roughly means that the content of our beliefs rides on top of the structure. Most importantly, this means that a belief’s content doesn’t stand in a causal relation with the world in such a way that could make it visible to the mechanisms of contemporary evolutionary theory (whether or not genetic drift could is another question, and probably an implausible suggestion). Ramsey suggests, though, that the content of our beliefs is just as visible to natural selection as structure is, and illustrates this with a map analogy:

Suppose ten individuals are given ten different maps, only one of which provides an accurate route to buried treasure. If we want to explain the behavior of any given individual (including the one with the right map) then all we need to appeal to are the actual directions- the instructions and arrows and such- physically displayed on that individual’s map. The intrinsic features of the map are the causally relecant properties that produce the behavior in question, and the accuracy or inaccuracy of any given map would be, by and large, irrelevant. But now suppose that instead of explaining the actual behaviors of the treasure hunters, we want to know why the behavior of one hunter is of a certain sort- namely, of the sort that actually succeeds in finding the treasure. Clearly then it would be appropriate to appeal to the further fact that the lucky hunter’s map is the accurate one. That is, if we want to explain how one hunter actually manages to find the treasure, the accuracy of his map becomes the causally salient feature- it is what makes it the case that this particular hunter succeeds while the others fail. Indeed, if finding the treasure was in some way critical for survival, it would be the feature of the map that makes it the case that this hunter survives while others do not.
ND, p. 17.

So the content of a belief can supervene on, say, the structure of the world and our brain and the relation between them. Nevertheless, such an irreducible state such as being true can indeed be relevant with respect to explanation. So in the same sense that camouflage can be visible to natural selection (where the parts, like neurons, don’t explain it’s evolutionary worthiness), content is visible to natural selection. Essentially, I take Ramsey to simply deny Plantinga the possibility of his wedge between the structure and the content of belief. He is an externalist in the sense that beliefs aren’t in the brain, or rather, neuronal, but are relations that “reach out” and grab something in the outside world.

Ramsey’s second thrust of his essay is that Plantinga simply hasn’t provided a very good defeater for evolutionary reliabilism- the view that evolutionary processes shape our cognitive mechanisms. For one, it just seems prima facie unlikely that evolution could provide faculties that got things wrong most of the time while still proving adaptive. A point here that should probably be made clear is that Ramsey doesn’t think that evolution really selects beliefs. This is the wrong level of selection, and evolutionary forces select belief-forming mechanisms instead, which allows for error but, in a generalized analysis, tends to be conducive to truth. Without an account or explanation of those mechanisms (rather than ad hoc, highly complex Paul/tiger cases), it seems that Plantinga’s point is much weaker. Further, if we generalize Paul’s behavior with the tiger and make inferences to his belief-forming capacities, then it is a clear maladaption. Over time, his belief- or rather, the cognitive structure that produces such a belief- that petting tigers will prove destructive to his fitness.

Lastly, Ramsey goes on the offensive. Everyone realizes that there are mistakes in our inferential systems. Evolutionary reliabilism has a simple account for why this is so. But can theism provide such an account?

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During my free time this semester, I will be working on a project that I hope will be turned into a paper and/or presentation. I have an interest in Plantinga’s Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism, and for the past few years I’ve been reading up on different sub-debates within that particular discussion. This argument is a bit unwieldy in it’s current form, lacking precise and persuasive premises (where persuasive means something like ‘reasonable for a large portion of the philosophical community’). The gist of the argument might be summed up as follows:

“The conjunction evolution and naturalism leaves the existence of our purportedly rational cognitive faculties unexplained or very improbable.”

You can find full expositions of the argument all over the internet, and I have no intention of adding another string of bits to the collection. Instead, if you are relatively unfamiliar with the debate then I’ll just suggest you start with Plantinga himself (here is an interesting recent presentation). With that bit said, what I’ll be doing the next [months? years?] will be a kind of review of some of the major criticisms of the argument from the volume of essays devoted to it (amz) entitled Naturalism Defeated? I have notes done on the first chapter and I’ll probably upload them piecemeal over the next week.

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I’m reading Susan Haack’s Evidence and Inquiry, and she proposes a moderate evidentialist position that she believes shoots between the difficulties of foundationalism and coherentism, yet takes the best of both positions. Before I make any initial remarks on her arguments, I feel that this position may go overlooked simply because of the unfortunate word “foundherentism”. I think it’s a rule for analytic philosophers to come up with the most unwieldy names. Blech. Moving on….

FH1: A subject’s experience is relevant to the justification of his empirical beliefs, but there need be no privileged class of empirical beliefs beliefs justified exclusively by the support of experience, independently of the support of other beliefs.

FH2: Justification is not exclusively one-directional, but involves pervasive relations of mutual support.

Haack thinks experience is a necessary portion of justification which serves somewhere in the basic region of the foundations, but what is interesting to me is her claim that such experiences aren’t incorrigible. She uses the ophthalmologist’s fan test to show that you can, in fact, be mistaken about how something appears to you.

It seems that you can be confused about how you are experiencing a very basic sense deliverance. Are the lines the same size? Do some appear to be larger or bolder? For me personally, the answer isn’t entirely clear, which serves as a prima facie defeater of the incorrigibility of basic sense experiences.

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Relativism and strong forms of contextualism assert, from what I gather, that the content of a proposition is not true or false simpliciter, but rather true or false at a time/world/context. A motivation for accepting semantic relativism is the success of possible worlds semantics. It becomes easy to make the move from thinking about possible worlds semantics (specifically, what is true at some possible world) to what is true in the actual world. Quite obviously, there is an underlying assumption here that many find it reasonable to deny: that truthmaker theory of some sort is correct.

If you deny the truthmaker theory for, say, Trenton Merricks’ TSB (truth supervenes on being) account, this slide is wholly illegitimate. Perhaps the truth of a proposition is found in it’s constituent parts or a combination of those parts (the proposition) and not in relation to a possible world. One has a good defeater for analytic relativism if you deny that the truth of a proposition is dependent on a relation to a possible world.

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This is pretty cool:

MMA discusses evils and faith.

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The extended mind is an interesting theory of consciousness and cognition that attempts to reshape the way we look at what it means to be human. Does they mind end at our meaty borders? Can palm-pilots become external modules of the mind? I’m not so sure if there is much about the theory that is explanatorily interesting, but it is fun to think about nonetheless.
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