Much of my blogging has been devoted to trying to figure out
which distinctions between kinds of philosophical approaches are merely
sociological (e.g. reflections of the personal connections and academic
credentials of particular philosophers) and which are genuinely substantive. I
do think there are rather fundamental distinctions between kinds of
philosophers, but (as I’ve been arguing this week) I don’t think they
correspond to any kind of “division between departments” or “nexuses” that
clearly divide two or three kinds of departments (such nexuses exist, but they
are considerably more sociological in character). Nevertheless, I think that
Brian Leiter has been on to something by his division of “naturalistic” vs.
“humanist” philosophy. I just don’t think that this division explains anything
about the sociology of department relations. I just haven’t been able to put my
finger on what it is. But this morning, I received an e-mail from the prominent Rutgers graduate Michael Strevens, which was a reply to
my grouping Fodor and Stich into a natural kind in the comments thread of a previous posting. Strevens’s
comment it seems to me comes as close as I’ve seen to describing an actual
natural divide between kinds of philosophers. It does so furthermore by
remaining within the space of Rutgers philosophy. I think this suggests that the actual divisions between philosophers (as opposed to the merely sociological ones) do not divide departments into distinct nexuses. Anyway, here is Strevens:
I was bemused to see the names of Fodor and Stich used
together to pick out a “Rutgers style” of philosophy. It seems to me that Fodor
and Stich are as different as it is possible for two philosophers to be. More
precisely: Fodor and Stich lie on opposite sides, indeed opposite extremes, of
the most important division in philosophy, which might as much as any be called
the humanistic/scientific divide.
Fodor is a humanist insofar as his work on the mind is
an attempt to vindicate our self-understanding, our human picture of the mind:
it is a law-governed, representation-involving, inference and planning machine
in which what is inferred from what depends on the content of the
representations involved. That is to put things in modern vocabulary, but the
general picture is familiar from way back, and constitutes, in the eyes of many
psychologists, the core of a “folk psychology” common to all humankind.
Philosophy, in Fodor’s hands, fights on the side of humanity, attempting to
justify our ways to the world.
Stich, by contrast, uses the tools of philosophy to
undermine our conception of ourselves, to alienate us from our own minds. The
aim is to produce discomfort, uncertainty, the sudden dropping away of
foundations that had seemed secure. This is genuinely “scientific” philosophy.
It fights against humanity, or at least against human culture, which it
conceives as an accretion or insulating layer of prejudice, misapprehension,
and half-truth. It is an attempt to undercut our ways by appeal to the way the
world really is.
For the humanist, philosophy ought never to stray too
far from common sense. For the scientist, “common sense philosophy” is about as
attractive as “biblical biology”. Humanists may very well perceive scientists
as shallow, because scientists distrust and therefore keep their distance from
ways of thinking that are central to our conception of ourselves. Scientists
may very well perceive humanists as obscure, because until their work is done,
humanists must point to aspects of our self-understanding without fully
articulating them, or deluded, because without justification or even
articulation, they commit themselves to the validity of this self-understanding.
Of course, both camps have equal disdain for technical
problem-solvers…"
First, the use of logic or technical tools cross-cuts the
humanist-scientific divide described by Strevens. Many of the very best a
priori metaphysicians, such as Kit Fine, heavily exploit logical and technical
tools. But these tools are placed in the service of capturing our intuitions
about fundamental metaphysical facts having to do e.g. with modality and
essentialism. The appeal to “technical” in the recently much-abused phrase
“technical problem solver” distinguishes metaphysicians such as Kit Fine, who
makes use of such tools, from metaphysicians such as Sydney Shoemaker and Alvin
Plantinga, who generally do not use them. But this is an utterly superficial
distinction. In all substantive senses, Fine, Shoemaker, and Plantinga engage
in the same project (though with different conclusions). They take many our
common sense metaphysical categories at pretty-much face-value, and assume that
our intuitions about them are guides to metaphysical reality (though particular
intuitions may be explained away by clashes with other plausible a priori
principles).
Logic is most often used as a tool to represent points,
rather than a point in itself. Some people have great facility with this tool,
and others less facility. But use of logic or mathematics does not help make
any kind of distinction between kinds of philosophy or philosophers.
light on humanist vs. scientific distinction. Fodor is clearly a humanist, and
Stich is a scientific philosopher, and neither makes central use of historical
sources (notwithstanding Fodor’s recent foray into Hume scholarship). Appeal to
history of philosophy is a tool to make a philosophical point, a source of
evidence, rather than a kind of conclusion.
Strevens’s distinction is reminiscent of the distinction
Strawson made between descriptive and revisionary metaphysics in the
introduction of Individuals. Revisionary metaphysicians think it is a
legitimate option to end up with conclusions that validate very few features of
our ordinary conceptual scheme; indeed, such philosophers assign no epistemic
significance to facts about our ordinary conceptual scheme. Descriptive
metaphysicians take the task of philosophy to vindicate central features of
that scheme. Strevens’s distinction between “humanist” and “scientific”
philosophy is similar, but not identical. First, there are strongly revisionary
metaphysicians who are motivated by considerations other than scientific ones
(think of Van Inwagen’s Christian motivations for his ontology). Secondly,
there are philosophers of science (think of Tim Maudlin) who undertake in their
work to justify central features of our conceptual scheme (but maybe this shows
they aren’t scientific philosophers in Strevens’s sense).
departmental proclivities (e.g. Mi
department). But in general, I think each department, and indeed each area of
philosophy (even, as I’ve suggested, philosophy of science) contain representatives
of both attitudes.
-Jason



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