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Externalism and SelfKnowledge

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Title: Externalism and SelfKnowledge


1
Externalism and Self-Knowledge
  • Advanced Topics in Mind and Knowledge Lecture 8

2
The Prima Facie Problem
  • Very plausibly, we each have privileged access to
    at least some of the contents of our own minds
    a (first-person) authority about our thoughts and
    feelings.
  • According to the Twin Earth-style thought
    experiments, two psychologically identical people
    can have different thoughts.
  • But if theyre psychologically identical, their
    thoughts must appear to them to be exactly the
    same.
  • Therefore, neither of them really knows what he
    is thinking!

3
Privileged Access
  • That we have privileged access to our thoughts,
    and so privileged self-knowledge, seems too
    attractive to give up easily
  • Phenomenologically, it seems to be a
    straightforward fact.
  • To deny it smacks of an excessively radical
    behaviourism (Behaviourist pillow talk That was
    good for you how was it for me?)

4
Denying Externalism?
  • On the other hand, for many philosophers
    externalist thought experiments articulate a very
    powerful intuition (even without supporting
    arguments).
  • One option we should deny externalist intuitions
    and arguments (incompatibilism).
  • Another option accept externalism and
    self-knowledge, and deny the prima facie problem
    (compatibilism).

5
  • In this part of the course well be looking at
    arguments in favour of both compatibilism and
    incompatibilism, in the process refining our
    formulation of the prima facie problem.
  • In the rest of todays lecture well look at
    compatibilist responses given by Putnam, Davidson
    and Burge, as well as some problems for their
    accounts.

6
Putnam on Externalism and Self-Knowledge
  • One way to respond, advocated at one time by
    Putnam, is to admit that we cannot have
    privileged access to states with broad content
    but nevertheless we can have privileged access to
    states with narrow content.
  • Thus, a two-factor version of externalism is
    compatible with self-knowledge.
  • Drawbacks restricts us to a particular
    two-factor account of content. Arguably a retreat
    from full-blooded externalism.

7
Davidson on Externalism and Self-Knowledge
  • Traditional Cartesian viewpoint incorporates (i)
    semantic internalism, and (ii) self-knowledge as
    having an object before the mind (Davidson
    1987, 1991).
  • Putnam rejects (i), but accepts (ii), so loses
    privileged access to states with broad content.
  • Davidsons alternative is to deny (ii). He claims
    that we have direct, non-inferential knowledge of
    our own thoughts.
  • In fact, in order to interpret other people we
    have to assume they have privileged access to
    their own thoughts (1987, 1991)!

8
Problems for Davidson
  • Not too serious the positive aspect of his
    solution involves accepting his theory of
    radical interpretation, with its commitments to
    semantic indeterminacy and holism.
  • More serious grants direct access to thoughts,
    but not to what makes them the thoughts they are.
    Perhaps on Davidsons theory we shouldnt even be
    able to tell the difference between thinking and
    indigestion (McKinsey 1992).

9
Burge on Externalism and Self-Knowledge I
  • Burge (1988) In perception, we dont need to
    know about enabling conditions we dont need
    to know about, say, physiology to be able to feel
    pain.
  • Likewise with self-knowledge. In fact, its even
    less plausible as there is no epistemic gap
    between a thoughts subject and object (they are
    the same person).

10
Burge on Externalism and Self-Knowledge II
  • Basic self-knowledge such as the cogito
    involves thinking a thought, and thinking of it
    as ones own. Such thoughts are self-verifying,
    meaning they cannot be mistaken!
  • So I cannot be wrong that I am thinking that e.g.
    water is a liquid, and what the content water is
    a liquid is fixed by makes no difference to
    this.

11
Problems for Burge
  • Not too serious only applies to basic
    self-knowledge
  • But it shows the prima facie problem is in
    principle avoidable.
  • More serious Burge is effectively saying that
    externalism is a metaphysical thesis, and
    self-knowledge is an epistemological issue, so
    theres no conflict (McKinsey 1992). But this
    cant be right, because then on standard Kripkean
    semantics thoughts entail all necessary existents!

12
Next week Incompatibilism
  • The early compatibilist responses weve
    considered here have proved far from conclusive.
  • Next week well consider incompatibilist reponses
    themed around the McKinsey-Brown argument,
    which refines the prima facie argument by
    formulating it in terms of a priori knowledge.
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