The Structure of Justification - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

The Structure of Justification

Description:

Suppose someone comes to believe I am hungry' for no reason. The belief is not justified. ... i.e. I am being appeared to this way. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:29
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: Dar966
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Structure of Justification


1
Lecture 3
  • The Structure of Justification

2
Arts Career Expo (ACE)
  • Wednesday Jan 21st
  • 5 830pm
  • SUB Ballroom and Classrooms 2nd floor.
  • 5
  • www.arts.ubc.ca/careerexpo

3
  • Jills office hours Thursday 4-5.
  • Jamies office E274

4
  • The Epistemic Regress Problem

5
  • What justifies your belief that P?
  • Some other belief that Q
  • What justifies your belief Q?
  • Some other belief that R.

6
  • The epistemic regress argument is a different
    argument for skepticism than the Matrix argument.
  • It is a much more devastating argument, attacking
    all knowledge, not just knowledge of the external
    world.

7
Four responses
  • 1. Foundationalism Certain beliefs are
    justified, but not by other beliefs.
  • 2. Coherentism Q justifies P and.P justifies Q.
  • 3. Infinitism P is justified by an infinite
    chain of beliefs.
  • 4. Skepticism P is not justified

8
Foundationalism The Pyramid
P41
  • Foundationalists hold that our knowledge has a
    structure obeying the following rules.
  • A) All nodes below a node directly serve jointly
    to support it.
  • B) Each node must be a proposition that S is
    justified in believing at t.
  • C) If a node is not basic (for S at t), it must
    have successors.
  • D) Each branch of the epistemic pyramid must
    terminate.

P31
P21
P21
P13
P12
P11
Basic Beliefs
9
Coherentism The Raft
  • Any part of the boat can
  • be fixed (but not all at once).
  • Any part of ones set of
  • beliefs can be justified
  • (but not all at once).

P5
P1
P3
P4
P2
P6
10
Infinitism The Eternal Pyramid
  • A) All nodes below a node
  • directly serve jointly to
  • support it.
  • B) Each node must be a proposition that S is
    justified in believing at t.
  • C) Every node must have successors.
  • D) No branch of the epistemic pyramid terminates.

11
Roderick Chisholm
  • 1916-1999
  • American philosopher
  • Taught at Brown
  • Best known for his
  • foundationalist theory of
  • knowledge.

12
Foundationalism
  • Certain beliefs are basic.
  • They are justified, but not by other beliefs.
  • So what does justify them?
  • But first, perhaps this whole enterprise of
    justifying basic beliefs is a mistake

13
  • We shouldnt ask what justifies basic beliefs!
  • Why?
  • 1. We should give up on the quest for certainty.
  • 2. There is nothing we can do to justify basic
    beliefs.
  • 3. No-one is challenging us to justify our basic
    beliefs. (And if they do we should ignore them.)

14
  • 1. We should give up on the quest for certainty.
  • Response Were not asking for certainty. Were
    asking for knowledge, and knowledge requires
    justification.

15
  • 2. There is nothing we can do to justify basic
    beliefs.
  • Response Were not being asked to do anything.
    Were being asked what our existing justification
    is.

16
  • 3. No-one is challenging us to justify out bascis
    beliefs. (And if they do we should ignore those
    pesky skeptics.)
  • Response Im not a
  • skeptic. I know we have
  • justification and I just want to
  • figure out what it is.

17
Background
  • The belief that I am having a red experience is
    different from the belief that I am having a red
    experience.

Beliefs
Experiences
18
A Foundationalist Theory
  • Basic beliefs are self-justifying

19
(No Transcript)
20
Beliefs about your own attitudes
  • () I believe that snow is white.
  • How would I express my justification for ()?
  • I believe that snow is white
  • So the belief is self-justifying.

21
  • The same goes for all beliefs about ones own
    attitudes
  • I hope for world peace.
  • I fear the reaper.
  • I desire some BC bud.

22
A second category of self-justifying beliefs
  • Beliefs expressing current experience.
  • I am hungry
  • What justifies my belief that I am hungry?
  • The fact that I am hungry
  • I am hungry

23
Clarification1 A non-self-justifying belief
  • There lies a key
  • What justifies my belief that there lies a key?
  • The fact that there lies a key?
  • No. The key may be cleverly camouflaged.

24
  • There is a person
  • Does the fact that there is a person justify
    the belief that there is a person?
  • No, not if the person is well camouflaged.

25
Clarification 2
  • Self-justifying seems to imply that the belief
    is justified by the belief.
  • But this is clearly false.
  • Suppose someone comes to believe I am hungry
    for no reason.
  • The belief is not justified.

26
Self-Justifying
  • Chisholm means that the fact that justifies the
    belief is the same as the content of the belief.
  • The belief I am hungry is justified by the fact
    that I am hungry.
  • If the fact wasnt true, the belief wouldnt be
    justified.

27
Hans Reichenbach
  • 1891-1953
  • German born.
  • Taught at UCLA
  • Logical empiricist

28
Reichenbachs Objection to Foundationalism
  • Im having a white experience
  • The present way of appearing is the way in which
    white objects ordinarily appear.
  • And this statement is not self-justified it
    relies on facts about how white objects normally
    appear.
  • It connects your current experience to other
    experiences of whiteness.

29
Objection continued
  • In Chisholms terms
  • The fact that The present way of appearing is
    the way in which white objects ordinarily appear
    does not justify the belief that The present way
    of appearing is the way in which white objects
    ordinarily appear.
  • So the belief is not self-justifying after all.

30
The Question
  • Can we formulate a significant appears statement
    without comparing some appearance with some other
    appearance?
  • If yes, foundationalism wins.
  • If no, foundationalism loses.

31
  • Can we formulate a significant appears statement
    without comparing some appearance with some other
    appearance?
  • Yes - Perhaps we are just making a claim about
    our current appearances, and should replace
    white with this.
  • i.e. I am being appeared to this way.
  • But now we barely seem to have any kind of
    judgement at all.

32
  • Can we formulate a significant appears statement
    without comparing some appearance with some other
    appearance?
  • An argument for No
  • 1. When you believe this appears white you are
    assuming you are using the word white in the
    way you have formerly used it.
  • 2. Any justification for this assumption will
    refer to past experiences.
  • 3. Therefore, the justification of this appears
    white depends on all these past experiences.

33
  • The conclusion does not follow from the premises.
  • Distinguish
  • What is said by the words
  • The assumptions concerning the adequacy of those
    words for expressing what is said.
  • Lots of stuff goes into (b) that doesnt go into
    the justification of (a).
  • Lots of assumptions are required for the words to
    express what is said (b), but they are no part of
    the justification of (a).

34
  • Suppose a Frenchman says
  • There are apples in the basket.
  • He means to say there are
  • potatoes in the basket.
  • His mistaken assumptions about
  • his words dont affect his justification
  • for believing There are apples in the basket.

35
Wilfrid Sellars
  • 1912-1989
  • American philosopher
  • Taught at Pittsburgh
  • Best known for his
  • critique of foundationalism
  • Developed the incompatible
  • food triad puzzle.

36
Authority
  • Sellars claims that any sentence that expresses
    knowledge must have authority.

37
(No Transcript)
38
  • Any sentence that expresses knowledge must be
    justified.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com