Philosophical Problems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 17
About This Presentation
Title:

Philosophical Problems

Description:

In other words: are there politicians who do not deceive others for gain? ... In other words: can one deceive others for gain but still not be a politician? Philosophy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:86
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 18
Provided by: chris369
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Philosophical Problems


1
Philosophical Problems
  • Most philosophical problems are conceptual in
    nature
  • One way for this to happen is for two beliefs to
    conflict conceptually with one another

2
Example
  • There is evil in the world
  • God exists
  • A problem because the concept of God might
    include being all good and creator of
    everything.
  • Thus, it seems prima facie impossible for God and
    Evil to exist concurrently.

3
Response
  • There is no God! (allows for evil)
  • There is no evil! (allows for God)
  • A redefining of God or Evil that makes the two
    concepts compatible
  • One medieval solution define evil as a lack and
    then declare that God creates everything that
    positively exists, whereas lacks do not
    positively exist.

4
What Did it Do?
  • Note that this is a conceptual issue. Redefining
    evil to make it compatible with God is to
    figure out a way for the two concepts to work
    together, or to be able to apply in the same
    conditions.

5
What is Redefining?
  • Start with definitions. A definition of X gives
    necessary and sufficient conditions for a given
    concept to apply in the world (for it to be
    instantiated.

6
Necessary Conditions
  • X is a necessary condition for Y if and only if
  • If you have Y, then you must have X.
  • If you dont have X, then you dont have Y.

7
Necessary Conditions
  • Being three sided is a necessary condition for
    being a triangle. So,
  • If you have Y (a triangle), then you must have X
    (being three-sided).
  • If you dont have X (three sidedness), then you
    dont have Y (being a triangle).
  • In other words, being three sided is an
    essential part of what triangle objects are. The
    concept of triangularity cannot be instantiated
    without three-sidedness also being
    instantiated.

8
Sufficient Conditions
  • X is a sufficient condition for Y if and only if
  • If you have X, then you must have Y.

9
Sufficient Conditions
  • Being scalene is a sufficient condition for
    being a triangle. So,
  • If you have X (being scalene), then you must have
    Y (being a triangle).
  • In other words, if the property of being
    scalene is instantiated, that is sufficient for
    us to know that triangularity is also
    instantiated.

10
Once Again
  • To define a concept requires that we give both
    necessary and sufficient conditions. So we must
    list
  • what properties must be instantiated if that
    concept is instantiated
  • AND
  • The properties which, if instantiated, would be
    enough for us to know that the concept is also
    instantiated.

11
Criticize These Definitions
  • Politician a person who deceives others for
    personal gain.
  • Is this a necessary condition? (can the concept
    be instantiated without the condition being
    instantiated?)
  • In other words are there politicians who do not
    deceive others for gain?

12
Criticize These Definitions
  • Politician a person who deceives others for
    personal gain.
  • Is this a sufficient condition? (can the
    condition be instantiated without the concept
    being instantiated?)
  • In other words can one deceive others for gain
    but still not be a politician?

13
Philosophy
  • Understand the concepts people use by attempting
    to ascertain the exact conditions under which
    they would apply (or not apply). So define
    concepts.
  • Socrates asked big questions, like what is
    beauty? or what is the good?
  • He wants to know what is the essential nature of
    these things?

14
The (Dreaded) Euthyphro Problem
  • What is the holy? (what are its necessary and
    sufficient conditions?)
  • Pass 1 Prosecuting someone for murder.
  • Whats wrong with it?

15
The (Dreaded) Euthyphro Problem
  • What is the holy? (what are its necessary and
    sufficient conditions?)
  • Pass 2 What is pleasing to the Gods.
  • Whats wrong with it? (assuming the Greek
    mythology Socrates and Euthyphro share).

16
The (Dreaded) Euthyphro Problem
  • Pass 3 What is pleasing to the Gods.
  • What is holy is what is pleasing to the Gods.
  • The Gods disagree.
  • So, it is possible for some X, some Gods will be
    pleased by it, some will hate it.
  • So, it is possible that some X has and lacks the
    property holy.
  • Since it is not possible for 4 to be true, some
    premise in 1 - 3 must be false.

17
Conceptual Analysis
  • Identify a problem. (What is holiness?)
  • Propose a hypothesis (holiness is what is
    pleasing to the Gods.)
  • Derive a test implication. So, if true, we are
    committed to the fact that some things will be
    holy and not holy at the same time.
  • Perform the test. The concept cannot exist in a
    world governed by the hypothesis given.
  • Accept or reject the hypothesis. REJECT, since
    contradictions cannot exist.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com