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Showing posts with label philosophy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label philosophy. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2025

So, How's The Writing Going?

So, How's The Writing Going?

Fans of the blog new and old will have been on something of an emotional rollercoaster over the last couple of months. On February 14 your favourite website burst back into the blogosphere with a renewed sense of purpose; I was going to write frequent posts even when I had nothing to say, exercising it like a long-neglected muscle until it became a powerful mouthpiece through which I could eventually put something valuable into the world.

The following week I posted about how I'd been eating at least one banana each day this year and documenting the journey on my second favourite microblogging site — I'm still keeping that up, by the way — and formed an intention to write a post each week. The following two Fridays brought posts about my various reading habits and the Kinks song Plastic Man. Things were going well.

Cracks began to show in week five, when my post was about how I'd got in over my head trying to write a post about Susan Stebbing and the second dogma of empiricism and wasn't going to be able to put up anything proper that day. The following week was also touch and go behind the scenes but I did manage to get one out about poetry. That's the most recent one, and it was twenty days ago. So, what happened?

The Distractions Of Ambition

The short answer is that I've been working on the Stebbing post. That needn't have been a problem: my plan was to keep at it while still putting out something else on Fridays, and then put the Stebbing one out in the week it was ready. But as you'll recall from the first post of the new era, the first step of the post was percolation, and you can't be percolating posts about poetry and bananas when you're distracted by something else. Or at least that's how it's turned out for me. And with no percolation, I've found myself tired and uninspired on Fridays, and of course it's so much easier to just put a little joke on Bluesky about how people will have to spend their Friday nights doing something else.

It isn't just the regular blogging that this Stebbing post has distracted me from. Remember I said I was reading a set theory textbook? Well I haven't opened that for weeks, and I'm wondering if I ever will. Perhaps I should just return it to the library and give up on the possibility of ever arguing for the indeterminacy of the continuum hypothesis based on Avicenna's notion of conceptual parts.

One big part of the distractions from the Stebbing post were that the second dogma part sent me down a bit of a Quine rabbit hole. (Or is it an undetached rabbit-part hole?) I still like Quine and find him interesting and enjoyable to read, and so after reading Two Dogmas to refresh my memory I ended up rereading the rest of From A Logical Point Of View as well, and some of the papers in Ontological Relativity, and it's all been very fascinating but any time spent reading and thinking about Quine is time not spent percolating frivolous blogposts about fruit or writing poems that scan perfectly and contain no interpretive secrets. And of course I've been reading things by and about Stebbing too, although it doesn't really feel like it's been that much.

The Stebbing Post

So anyway, what's this post about? What is this connection between Stebbing and the second dogma that I've been so keen to tell you all about? Well basically I read a paper of hers years ago called 'Logical Positivism and Analysis' from 1933, and was struck by the fact (if it is a fact) that one of the main positions she was critiquing was the second dogma of empiricism. But her response to it was entirely different from Quine's, which makes it all the more interesting, and so I thought I should write it up at some point.

Nonetheless, writing it up has proven difficult. I didn't think it'd be that difficult, because I first read the Stebbing paper years ago and had kind of integrated my thoughts on the topic into my general worldview, and so I ought to be able to be able to talk about it more or less off the cuff. I could reread the relevant texts so I can explain how what they say links up with what I'm saying, and that'd be that. But as can be the way with these things, rereading one thing leads to reading another, and you try to make sure you're interpreting things right and not missing out on mentioning important things that really ought to be mentioned, and things get away from you. Eventually you start wondering whether there's really anything important to say here at all. It can be fairly disspiriting at times, although parts of it can be exhilarating too.

Ultimately I think I can see myself falling prey to the kind of perfectionism that I talked about in the Field Of Dreams post. I don't expect the end product to be great in spite of the extra work I've put into it; this is history of philosophy after all and I don't really know what I'm doing. The basic ideas I want to get across are straightforward enough:

  • 'Logical positivism and analysis' is a really interesting paper and is now available to read online, so if you're interested in that sort of thing, go and read it!
  • Quine describes the second dogma of empiricism as 'reductionism: the belief that each meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical construct upon terms which refer to immediate experience' (1951/1961:20), and Stebbing is arguing against a very similar idea in her paper. Quine was thinking in large part about Carnap as his opponent, and so was Stebbing. And Quine was writing almost two decades later, so how about that.
  • Stebbing and Quine both associate the dogma with the logical positivists/empiricists' verificationism, according to which the meaning of a sentence is or at least is determined by what would count as a verification that it was true. And they both thought the verificationists were onto something, in that experience is ultimately where the rubber hits the semantic road. They don't go worrying about how statements of the verification principle aren't themselves verifiable or anything like that. They just don't think meaningful statements all reduce to statements about immediate experience.
  • Quine's response to the dogma, famously, was to adopt a kind of holism in which we don't think about the meanings (or for Quine, synonymy relations) and confirmation or otherwise of sentences in isolation, but instead think of sentences and the beliefs they express as standing in an interconnected web which responds to unexpected experiences by making modifications all over the place. But we should nonetheless be careful not to think of Quine as a semantic or confirmational holist, because Hilary Putnam says that's a mistake, and he should know. (Quine doesn't really believe in meanings or confirmation at all, you see.) Now, Stebbing's response is entirely different:
  • Stebbing responds by introducing the notion of the indirect given. Just because belief about things remote from the given have to be based on beliefs about the given, doesn't mean they have to be based on beliefs about immediate experience, because being given need not mean being directly given the way immediate experience (and not much else) is.
  • She isn't fully explicit in that paper about what she means by the indirect given 1, but I like to think of it in these terms: directness is a causal matter, whereas givenness is a normative matter. Your belief that there is a tree through the window is at one end of a time-consuming causal chain with the tree at the other end and photons, eyes and visual cortices in the middle. But that doesn't mean it's inferred from beliefs about experience or anything else, because it isn't inferred: you need not and could not reconstruct the (in fact causal) process whereby the belief came about in order to justify it. It's just "oh look, there's a tree out there". The belief about the tree enters on the normative ground floor.
  • Now, one fun thing to notice about Quine's and Stebbing's responses to the dogma are that the dogma has two parts and they pick different parts to attack. Quine attacks the reductionism part, and Stebbing attacks the to-experience part. Isn't that neat? I think it's neat. And it opens up the possibility that they're both right: Quine is right about beliefs being a web that responds to unexpected inputs all over, and Stebbing is right that the inputs aren't immediate experiences; they're everyday out-there propositions about trees and so on. And I actually think they are both right in this sense, although I wasn't planning to argue for that in the post.

The Rabbit Hole

The problem is that I don't feel like I can just write a post with the outline above and have done with it; I want to make sure it's right — I suspect some of the claims in the outline above aren't right — and I want to connect it up properly with the texts, and it sprawls. One thing I found when reading the Quine stuff — it's actually in 'Epistemology naturalized', which is much less obscure than most people's least obscure paper — was a reference to an exchange between Carnap and Neurath in 1932 where they talk about whether protocol sentences should be sentences about experience or sentences about physical things, or sentences about ourselves having experiences of physical things.

The papers were in German but have since been translated into English, which is good for me because I can't read German, and Carnap kind of gets talked out of the strong form of methodological solipsism which Stebbing was objecting to2. This was in 1932, the year before Stebbing's paper came out; her paper was based on a talk she gave on March 22 1933. So it seems Carnap's methodological solipsism was raising eyebrows all round. The famously tolerant Carnap seems to think in his paper that there's more than one way to climb his methodological mountain, and he gives an alternative account of protocol sentences which he credits in large part to Karl Popper, in which protocol sentences are about physical things and can be basically any statement about them, and they can act as protocol sentences in one context but admit of further justification in other contexts. I think there's a lot in that, and it points away from the second dogma stuff in both the direction Stebbing took things and the direction Quine took them. And that was Carnap himself, already, in 1932. And Frederique Janssen-Lauret (2017) argues that Stebbing herself was also going in a holist direction that anticipates Quine and Susan Haack to an extent, although I haven't properly got around the textual evidence for that yet.

Neurath's paper is also of interest; it includes the famous bit about how we're like mariners trying to rebuild our boats on the open sea, but instead of the idea being just that you have to do it a bit at a time so the boat doesn't sink, it's also important to the image that you only have access to materials that are already on the boat. I wasn't aware of that angle. Neurath also argues in that paper that private languages are impossible. And if you're impressed to see someone doing that in 1932, Quine (1969a) reports that Dewey was dismissing the possibility of private languages way back in 1925. It's all fascinating of course, and I wanted to include it all, but it's just too much and I fear that if I don't let go of this mindset then you'll never hear about any of it, so I'm not really sure what the best thing to do with the project is.

I'm on holiday next week — that's also why this is coming out on a Thursday — but hopefully I'll see you the week after that!

Notes

[1] She does refer us to Stebbing (1929) for the sense in which perception is indirect, and basically the answer is fairly standard for people who think perception is indirect, in that it's mediated by a sensum. To be honest I was a little disappointed when I read this, but hope something more interesting can be made of the notion of the indirect given.

[2] There's a fun bit in Stebbing's paper where she's talking about the methodological solipsism of Carnap and whatever kind of solipsism Wittgenstein adopts in the Tractatus, where she says "The doctrines of both Carnap and Wittgenstein seem to me to suggest that Wittgenstein’s statement—’What solipsism means is quite correct, only it cannot be said’—is just the reverse of what they require. For, in my opinion, methodological solipsism ought to assert: ‘What solipsism means is ɴᴏᴛ correct, but only solipsism can be said’. I do not, however, suppose for a moment that either Carnap or Wittgenstein would regard my suggestion as other than absurd." (1933:74, her emphasis)

References

  • Carnap, Rudolf 1932/1987: 'On protocol sentences', translated by ; Richard Creath and Richard Nollan, Noûs 21(4):457-470
  • Dewey, John 1925/1958: Experience and Nature (La Salle, IL: Open Court)
  • Janssen-Lauret, Frederique 2017: 'Susan Stebbing, Incomplete Symbols and Foundherentist Meta-Ontology', Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 5(2):6-17
  • Neurath, Otto 1932/1959: 'Protocol sentences', translated by Frederic Schick, in A. J. Ayer (ed) Logical Positivism (New York: The Free Press):199–208
  • Quine, W. V. A. 1951/1961: 'Two dogmas of empiricism'
  • Quine, W. V. A. 1961: From a Logical Point of View, 2nd ed. (New York: Harper and Row)
  • Quine, W. V. A. 1969a: 'Ontological Relativity', in Ontological Relativity and Other Essays (Columbia University Press): 26–68
  • Quine, W. V. A. 1969b: 'Epistemology naturalized', in Ontological Relativity and Other Essays (Columbia University Press): 69-90
  • Stebbing, L. Susan 1929: 'Realism and Modern Physics III', Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Supplementary Volumes , 1929, Vol. 9, Knowledge, Experience and Realism, pp. 146–161
  • Stebbing, L. Susan 1933: 'Logical positivism and analysis', Proceedings of the British Academy 19:53–87

Friday, March 7, 2025

Plastic Man

Plastic Man

Like all British people, my dream is to one day become notable enough to be invited onto onto the long-running BBC radio programme Desert Island Discs. I expect most of us have also got our list of eight songs plus a book and a luxury at the ready for when we get the call, and one of my songs is Plastic Man by the Kinks.

It's a catchy song, and Wikipedia informs us that is was released specifically in the hope of having a hit following their now critically lauded but then commercially disappointing album The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society, but this didn't work out for them because the BBC wouldn't play the song on account of it containing the word "bum". The best laid plans.

Anyway, while the catchy tune and lyrical cheekiness do appeal to me, that's only half the story about why I'm taking it to my desert island. The other half is that I think that in a way I'm something of a plastic man myself, and this week I'd like to talk a little about why.

Žižek

I'm not exactly a fan of Slavoj Žižek, and I've sometimes heard from people who speak with more authority about him than I can that there are good reasons not to be, but he's a big name, and one time I decided that even if only in a fairly minimal way I should check out what the deal was with him and I so I read a picture book called Introducing Slavoj Žižek: A Graphic Guide (Kul-Want and Piero 2011). The book contains several fairly arresting images, but one thing that really made an impression on me was in a section titled "The Removal Of Risk":

'A further reason why Žižek is suspicious of the equation that is made between happiness and self-realization in Western society today is how cautious and guarded people are about allowing any sesne of intensity, risk or emotional excess into their lives.

"This is reflected in the creation of a new series of products: coffee without caffeine, cream without fat, beer without alcohol."

These products are popular precisely because they are deprived of their malignant properties.' (Kul-Want and Piero 2011: 115)

He goes on to talk about the same mindset being manifested in some modern varieties of warfare, sex, politics, and also multiculturalism, but that's not so much what struck me about the passage. What struck me about it was that I thought "That's me! I drink decaf coffee and non-alcoholic beer, and I eat vegetarian meat too! I even have multiple plastic plants in my home. What's wrong with depriving things of their malignant properties?"

I expect it was around the same time that I first discovered Plastic Man, which (as you'll be aware if you're familiar with the song or at least followed the YouTube link earlier) is about a man made of plastic (bum included) who surrounds himself with plastic objects, including plastic flowers like I have. And so the song and Žižek's tirade against my beloved defanged simulacra became inextricably linked in my mind.

Keeping It Unreal

Now, I don't want to oversell my plastic lifestyle. I do drink plenty of real coffee (mostly instant, but still caffeinated) but switch to decaf after around four or five in the evening, and sometimes go with decaf earlier in the day too if I already feel sufficiently wired at that moment. There are now at least two real plants in my home in addition to the several plastic ones (including some lego flower arrangements which I think are especially nice, although they were built by my partner so I can't take credit for them). I am a vegetarian and so all the meat I eat is fake meat, and a month or so ago I switched to drinking mostly but not exclusively non-alcoholic beer. I also drink diet Coke, Pepsi etc in preference to the sugary versions when they're available.

Embracing products like this can be quite liberating, because it essentially means you can uncouple drinking coffee from getting wired, drinking beer from getting drunk, surrounding yourself with plants from looking after plants and so on. It allows you to be more intentional about how you spend your time: you're not finding yourself doing one thing just because you decided to do the other. It's also worth noting that non-alcoholic beers have got a lot better since they first appeared, just as vegetarian meat has. I'm not old enough to rembember being able to tell decaf coffee from regular in a blind taste test, but if you are, that's got better too. With most of these things, if you think it's bad because you tried some twenty years ago and it tasted kind of nasty, then your information is out of date. Even astroturf has come on a lot as I understand it.

The Desert Of The Real

Žižek did in fact write these things over twenty years ago, in an essay called "Passions of the real, passions of semblance", which is the first chapter of a book called Welcome to the Desert of the Real! Five Essays on September 11 and Related Dates (Žižek 2002)1. The excellent title of the book, as he explains in the essay, is from something Morpheus says to Neo after he wakes up from the Matrix and sees "a deslolate landscape littered with burnt-out ruins — what remains of Chicago after a global war" (Žižek 2002: 15).

I read the essay for the first time quite recently, and to be honest it didn't really flesh out the critique of my plastic lifestyle in a way I found very satisfactory. I quite enjoyed reading it nonetheless, although I don't really feel equal to giving a précis of it for you. One theme in it is the idea that Americans in then-recent times had tried to insulate themselves from the real, but 9/11 happened and America was forced to confront the kind of violent and dangerous realities that it had been trying to confine to other parts of the world, and when it did Americans processed the events in a manner more suitable for processing fiction. Major American landmarks being destroyed is something that happens all the time in disaster movies, but wasn't supposed to happen in real life.

I don't really feel qualified to have much of an opinion about whether he's right about 9/11, but after taking the side of the plastic men against Žižek for so long, maybe it's worth me re-evaluating my position now that I've finally read the essay he was attacking us in. Should I be waking up, cleaning off the goo and walking among the burnt-out ruins of Chicago?

The Experience Machine

Before we give the obvious negative answer to this question, let's think a little about the experience machine. Robert Nozick (1974: 42–5) proposed a thought experiment where people can plug themselves into a machine and experience a virtual reality much nicer than the one that Neo and the rest of us experience in The Matrix, and in fact one of our own choosing, with the only catch being that none of it is real. (We'll ignore David Chalmers' (2009) surprisingly persuasive arguments that the world inside the Matrix actually is real.) Nozick's argument is supposed to be an argument against hedonism, or any other view of wellbeing on which only experiences matter, and by extension hedonistic utilitarianism, because the experience machine gives you all the experiences you could want but doesn't give you everything of value, and so there must be something of value other than experiences (and a fortiori something other than pleasure.)

Nozick notes some things you might want from the machine — to do things rather than just feel like you're doing them, be a certain way, and to experience a deeper reality — and proposes further machines to meet some of those further needs. He still doesn't think we should want to plug in, and thinks that the problem is the machines living our lives for us, rather than our living them ourselves, "in contact with reality" (Nozick 1974: 45).

This is a fun thought experiment to discuss when you're new to studying philosophy, and not everyone agrees with Nozick that plugging yourself into the machine isn't the way to go. I personally do have the hoped for negative gut response to the scenario, but my considered view is that people act as well as experiencing and the idea of a human life that's experiences-only isn't really coherent, and I'm not sure the results machine really helps. A life with all cognition and no conation would be like a life with all inhalation and no exhalation. Introducing conation into the experience machine scenario — there's conation in the Matrix — would change it a great deal, and I think it's possible that if it could be fully made sense of and still contain enough pleasure to be the challenge to hedonism Nozick is after then we might stop being able to ignore Chalmers' surprisingly persuasive case for the reality of virtual worlds.

This doesn't sound like a complete response to the experience machine case because it isn't one, but it's where I am with it these days. But now we've been sweet-talked into valuing the real, let's see if we can get ourselves some sympathy for Žižek's take on plastic plants2.

Blurring The Boundaries

Žižek complains that "What happens at the end of this process of virtualization, however, is that we begin to experience 'real reality' itself as a virtual entity" (2002:11), and then he starts talking about the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center and disaster movies. So, is he right? Does drinking non-alcoholic beer and filling your home with plastic plants lead you to start seeing reality itself as a virtual entity?

Let's see if we can find our way round to it by thinking about the experience machine and what it tells us about the value of the real. The problems with the machine are that it stops you doing things, being certain ways, and communing with a deeper reality, and that it lives your life for you. But non-alcoholic beer and the rest don't have these problems. You're still doing things, and you still have a personality; they're just different things and perhaps a different personality. They might stop you communing with a deeper reality, I suppose, but if so it's contingent and not at all for the reason Nozick gives about the experience machine, which is that it's limited to what we can create. That's a problem that's really quite specific to being hooked up to a machine, because if you're drinking a non-alcoholic beer there's still plenty of non-artificial stuff in your environment to be communing with.

I've tried to figure out a case for it, but I just don't think Žižek's right here. Maybe he's right about disaster movies or some other aspect of American life at the end of the 20th century, but I think the decaf angle is a red herring. And the reason essentially boils down to this: non-alcoholic beer is real. Decaf coffee is real. Plastic plants are not real plants, but I don't think it's that much of a stretch to say that they're real too. They are real things in my home. You can knock them over. They don't make as much of a mess as real plants when you do, but you can still do it, and if you can knock them over, they are real.

Now, I realize that by writing that last paragraph I'm leaving myself wide open to the charge that the blurring of the real and the virtual has already happened to me! Perhaps that's true; it would be difficult for me to know. But I don't think it has, so I'm going to keep drinking the unreal ales for now. Cheers, and see you next week!

Notes

[1] If you want to read it then I should give you a content warning for discussions of self harm and violent pornography, but I won't be discussing those themes here.

[2] The latter is not one of his examples but I think it would serve: apart from anything else, real plants die.

References

  • Chalmers, David J. (2009) 'The Matrix as Metaphysics', in Susan Schneider, Science Fiction and Philosophy: From Time Travel to Superintelligence (Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell) pp35–54
  • Kul-Want, Christopher and Piero 2011: Introducing Slavoj Žižek: A Graphic Guide (London: Icon Books)
  • Nozick, Robert 1974: Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New York: Basic Books)
  • Žižek, Slavoj 2002: Welcome to the Desert of the Real! Five Essays on September 11 and Related Dates (London and New York: Verso)

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Is Logic Normative?

Is Logic Normative?

Last year I read a paper by Gillian Russell with the self-explanatory title "Logic Isn't Normative" (Russell 2020). I already had some views about the normativity of logic, and found the paper a bit of a challenge for them, because the picture Russell presents of the relationship between logic and normativity is quite similar to how I see things, even though I think logic is normative and she thinks it isn’t. It seems to me that although our positions are in some ways quite close, there are things we disagree on that would prevent me from framing my position her way, as a view according to which logic isn't normative. I thought it'd be instructive, at least for me, to have a think about why.

Russell’s view, as I understand it, is roughly as follows. The subject matter of logic itself is descriptive.1 Logic studies which arguments are and aren’t truth-preserving, and this isn’t in itself a normative matter. If we’re taking the constituents of arguments to be sentences, then whether arguments are truth-preserving or not will depend on what sentences mean, the conditions under which they would and wouldn’t be true given what they mean, and which conditions are and aren’t jointly possible. (We'll look at the idea of truth preservation over things other than jointly possible conditions later.) This is all plausibly non-normative (although see note 1). If we take the constituents of arguments to be something else, say propositions, then the story’s a little different but it’s all still descriptive. (There’s some discussion about what the constituents of arguments are in Russell (2008).) These descriptive facts can then be combined with normative bridge principles from outside logic like you should only believe things that are true and you should only reject things that are not true, resulting in norms like if X ⊨ C then you shouldn’t believe all of X and reject C. The fact that you get the norms out at the end doesn’t make logic normative, because you could combine those bridge principles with any claim P and get the norm “you shouldn’t reject P”. So logic combines with the extralogical bridge principles to give you norms, but that doesn’t make it normative, since the normativity all comes from the bridge principles and not from the claims about truth-preservation, and only the latter are the subject matter of logic.

Now, even though I think logic is normative, this view isn’t so different from mine. (Indeed I expect that to some extent her views expressed elsewhere have probably influenced mine on this issue.) I think that there are the non-normative laws that Russell identifies as logical laws, and normative bridge principles that combine with them to give general principles about the relationship between logical consequence relations and how we should think. The difference between my view and Russell’s is that I think the resulting principles, which are normative, are logical laws. To an extent this may seem to be just bookkeeping, but I think it matters. Russell’s view suggests that when people disagree over what the right logic is, either they’re disagreeing over something descriptive, or their disagreement can at least be traced to a disagreement over something descriptive. The bridge principles are seen as either obvious or at least uncontested, so the descriptive stuff is where the action is. I don’t think that’s right; I think there’s plenty of action on the normative side, and that when people are arguing over what the right logic is, their disagreement is often irreducibly normative. First I’ll talk about three objections to Russell’s position that she discusses and one she mentions briefly; then I’ll talk about two potential cases of logical disagreement that I think strengthen the objection she calls the argument from demarcation, and finally I’ll talk a bit about what I think people are arguing over when they argue over what the right logic is.

Three Arguments For The Normativity Of Logic

Russell considers three arguments for the normativity of logic, and argues that they don’t establish anything inconsistent with the picture she’s putting forward, according to which logic itself is descriptive and all the normativity comes from extralogical bridge principles. She calls the three arguments the argument from normative consequences, the argument from error, and the argument from demarcation.

The argument from normative consequences says that logic must be normative because it has normative consequences and you can’t derive ought from is. The Humean premise that you can’t derive ought from is can of course be questioned, but even if we grant it there’s nothing here to undermine Russell’s position. What we think about logic does affect how we ought to think, but maybe that’s only because of the bridge principles. There’s no principle making it impossible to derive normative conclusions from a combination of descriptive and normative premises, and that’s what Russell thinks is going on.

The argument from error says that the laws of logic must be normative laws and not descriptive laws because people violate them. The laws of physics are descriptive, and we can’t break them. But people do believe inconsistent things and make fallacious inferences, and isn’t that breaking the laws of logic? Not according to Russell. On her view, breaking a logical law would be doing something like wearing a red hat without wearing a hat. (She doesn’t use this example.) You can’t break that kind of law, which indicates that they are descriptive, not normative. It seems to me that the question of whether someone with inconsistent beliefs is violating a logical law or not is very similar to the question of whether norms like you shouldn’t have inconsistent beliefs are logical laws or not, and so I agree with Russell that the argument from error isn’t going to get her opponents anywhere. At best it begs the question.

The argument from demarcation is the one that I think is most interesting and poses the biggest threat to Russell’s position. She quotes John MacFarlane:

Logic is often said to provide norms for thought or reasoning. Indeed, this idea is central to the way in which logic has been demarcated as a discipline, and without it, it is hard to see how we would distinguish logic from the disciplines that crowd it on all sides: psychology, metaphysics, mathematics, and semantics. (MacFarlane 2004:1)
Now, as I understand it Russell’s view about where logical laws come from takes them more or less to be reducible without remainder to semantics and metaphysics plus the mathematics involved. (There may be some psychology in there too, perhaps in the semantics.) This means you can see logic as an interdisciplinary thing rather than an autonomous discipline, and it doesn’t need normativity to demarcate a sharp boundary because it doesn’t have one.

For all that’s there in the MacFarlane quote (which is of course not all that’s there in his paper) we could leave it at that, but she rightly doesn’t leave it at that. There’s another worry, which is basically this: when we argue over what the right logic is, what are we arguing about? I suppose my view is that this is the central question in the philosophy of logic. Defenders of classical and intuitionistic logic don’t disagree over which conclusions follow from which sets of premises in classical logic or in intuitionistic logic; those are basically pure mathematical questions and when it comes to investigating them we’re all on the same side. The defenders of different logics disagree over which conclusions follow from which sets of premises full stop.

Russell’s response to this is that while it’s true that the defenders of different logics are not disagreeing about pure maths, that doesn’t mean what they are disagreeing about isn’t purely descriptive. The semantics/metaphysics mashup that is the study of truth-preservation for arguments is descriptive, and that’s what Russell thinks the defenders of different logics are arguing over. Do arguments from (P→Q)→P to P always preserve truth? Classical logicians say yes; intuitionistic logicians say no. According to Russell that’s their disagreement, and descriptive semantics and metaphysics can settle the question. And since this schema is like a version of Peirce’s law and adding it to intuitionistic logic gives you classical logic, settling it would settle all their other disagreements too. (We'll talk more about intuitionistic logic and whether it's really about truth-preservation later.)

A Fourth Way To Argue For The Normativity Of Logic

All three of these arguments have a flavour of indirectness to them; they don’t tell us why or how logic is normative, but just argue that somehow it must be, because otherwise it couldn’t have normative consequences, or we couldn’t break logical laws, or we’d have nothing to distinguish logical questions from mathematical questions. An alternative route would be to argue for a distinctively logical normative reality. Russell (2020: note 15) touches on this possibility when discussing a reviewer’s comment that logic might be normative because truth itself is normative. She accepts the conditional but demurs on the antecedent: she doesn’t think truth is normative (although there are norms involving it, just as there are norms involving many descriptive concepts).

What might this kind of view of truth or logic as normative look like? I’ll make two suggestions. One is a pragmatic theory of truth, where what’s true just is in some sense whatever’s good to believe. Here’s a passage from William James which contains an idea along those lines, although I don’t know enough about James’s views on truth to properly contextualize it:

'What would be better for us to believe'! This sounds very like a definition of truth. It comes very near to saying 'what we ought to believe': and in that definition none of you would find any oddity. Ought we ever not to believe what it is better for us to believe? And can we then keep the notion of what is better for us, and what is true for us, permanently apart?" (James 1907, Lecture VI §16)

A second possibility is suggested by the Aristotelian line that you have to believe the law of non-contradiction if you want to say anything at all.2 If his argument works (and I won't attempt to explain how it is supposed to work) then that arguably gives a reason for believing the law of non-contradiction directly, rather than with reference to its truth. Presumably this could also be contested as not entailing that logic itself is normative — so far all Aristotle’s argument does is give a reason for believing something — but both Aristotle’s argument and the pragmatist suggestion offer ways of embedding normativity deeper into the subject matter of logic than it is on Russell’s picture. But we won’t pursue these ways of way of arguing for the normativity of logic further here, and instead we’ll go back to the argument from demarcation.

Irreducibly Normative Disagreement

Consider the argument form called explosion (aka ex falso quodlibet or ex contradictione quodilibet), where you derive an arbitrary conclusion from contradictory premises. For example: Australia is big, and Australia is not big, therefore the sky is green. It’s classically (and intuitionistically) valid, and logics where it fails are called paraconsistent. There are two main objections to it that you hear from people who think the right logic is paraconsistent.

One objection is from people who are dialetheists, which means they think that contradictions can be true. Regular readers may recall that I think dialetheism is probably true. Dialetheists can object to explosion on the grounds that it doesn’t preserve truth. If contradictions can be true (without everything else also being true), then some arguments with contradictory premises can have all true premises without having a true conclusion. This fits into Russell’s model just fine: the disagreement over whether the right logic is paraconsistent stems from a disagreement over whether explosion preserves truth, which here turns on the entirely non-normative matter (bracketing the suggestion that truth is itself normative) of whether contradictions can be true.

Another objection to explosion is about relevance. Even if contradictions can’t be true, and so explosion (vacuously) preserves truth across all possible situations, maybe it still isn’t logically valid because the conclusion might have nothing to do with the premises. This is one of the main motivating thoughts behind relevant logic (also known as relevance logic). Not all fans of relevant logic are dialetheists, although some are. My own view is that the complaint about dialetheism and the complaint about relevance have basically nothing to do with each other, but even if you don’t think that, you don’t have have to be a dialetheist to want your logic to be relevant.

As I see it, the relevantist objection to explosion is a counterexample to Russell’s positive view about what the subject matter of logic is. Here we have a disagreement over what the right logic is which isn’t a disagreement about truth-preservation. This doesn’t yet establish that the disagreement is about something normative, although I think that in fact it probably is and will say more about why later. But how might Russell respond to this potential counterexample?

One possible response is just to maintain that logic is about truth-preservation, and so if the relevantists and non-relevantists agree about which arguments preserve truth then they agree about logic and their disagreement must be about something else. Of course, nothing prevents us from saying this, and indeed nothing prevents us from defining the word ‘logic’ so that what we say is true. But as I understand Russell’s position it’s more ambitious and interesting than that. It’s not meant to be just a recipe for taking a particular side in a verbal dispute. As I understand her position it’s meant to be more like a diagnosis: what all those people arguing over the right logic are arguing about boils down to a disagreement over something descriptive, specifically something about truth-preservation.

Hartry Field (2015) says something related to this that I feel I ought to mention but don’t properly understand. Here he is:

While it is correct that there are logicians for whom truth-preservation is far from the sole goal, this isn’t of great importance for my purposes. That’s because my interest is with what people who disagree in logic are disagreeing about; and if proponents of one logic want that logic to meet additional goals that proponents of another logic aren’t trying to meet, and reject inferences that the other logic accepts only because of the difference of goals, then the apparent disagreement in logic seems merely verbal. (Field 2015: 35, his emphasis)
I think that to see relevantists and non-relevantists as only having different goals isn’t quite right. It’s not just that relevantists want both truth-preservation and relevance while their opponents only want truth-preservation. At least sometimes, I think they’re both targeting the same notion of logical consequence but disagree over whether validating irrelevant arguments is a sign that something has gone wrong. If all you wanted was truth-preservation and relevance you might be happy with a kind of filter logic3, the most flatfooted of which would be classical logic minus any sequents with no variables appearing in both the premises and the conclusion. That logic would be non-transitive, since it would validate (Q&¬Q) ⊨ (Q&¬Q)∨(R&¬R) and (Q&¬Q)∨(R&¬R) ⊨ (R&¬R) but not (Q&¬Q) ⊨ (R&¬R). But relevantists usually aren’t happy with this, because they want an integrated account of logical consequence that is both truth-preserving and relevant. You can still see this as a difference of goals if you like, but even then it seems wrong to me to describe it as a mere verbal dispute. If verbal at all, it’s something along the lines of what Carrie Jenkins (2014) calls a serious verbal dispute; but even without committing to the possibility of there being such things we can note that differences of goals are things we can have serious arguments about. What confuses me even further about Field’s position is that he ends up arguing that we should understand even the arguments about logic that he’s discussing as arguments about how we should regulate our degrees of belief, and not as arguments about truth-preservation. His paper is complex and I think I’m probably missing something, but I just wanted to note that if he’s saying what he sounded to me like he was saying, then that’s a point of disagreement between us.

Supposing we don’t want to say that the disagreement between relevantists and non-relevantists is a (non-serious) verbal dispute turning on two different uses of the term “logic”, another possible response is to diagnose the relevance objection to explosion as not being about truth-preservation but still being descriptive. Maybe logic is about relevance and truth-preservation, or some kind of composite of the two, and the disagreement is over whether explosion meets that (descriptive) condition. Now this option might be available if we all saw relevance the way David Lewis did. Lewis (1988) argues that explosion is relevant after all: asserting a contradiction is equivalent to asserting everything, so a contradiction in the premises asserts whatever the conclusion is, and so it is relevant to the conclusion. The disagreement between Lewis and the relevantists could be thought of as a descriptive disagreement over whether explosion is relevant or not. The problem with this diagnosis is that it would put a lot of non-relevantists on the wrong side. Plenty of people, at least as I understand it, think that explosion is not a relevant inference but it is still part of the correct logic because the correct logic need not be relevant. They agree with the relevantists on the descriptive point but disagree about whether explosion is valid, so their disagreement must be about something else. In the next section we’ll reconsider whether the disagreement over relevance can be made out as being about truth-preservation after all, but for now it doesn’t seem possible to diagnose the dispute over explosion between relevantists and most of their opponents who aren’t David Lewis as being over the descriptive matter of whether explosion is relevant. There is general agreement that it isn’t relevant, even where there is disagreement over whether it’s valid.

Model Theory

So, what exactly is truth-preservation? The basic idea is that arguments preserve truth iff whenever the premises are all true the conclusion is true. This could be understood in terms of possibility: it’s not possible for the premises to be true and the conclusion not. That could be metaphysical possibility, or it could be logical possibility, or perhaps it could be some other kind of possibility. It seems to me that for Russell’s purposes it’d be better not to say logical possibility, because of the risk of circularity. If we explain logical possibility in terms of truth-preservation (since that’s what logic is about) and then explain what we mean by truth-preservation by appealing to logical possibility, it seems there’s a circle. It’s a bit like the problem Quine talked about in ‘Two Dogmas Of Empiricism’ (Quine 1951) of all the proposed accounts of analyticity appealing to some notion or other that’s similarly unexplained; but leaving aside what Quine says there, it seems to me there would be a circle in our case, and not in a good way. So we might be better off going with metaphysical possibility than with logical possibility. That way people who disagree over e.g. the law of non-contradiction can be disagreeing over whether all of its instances are metaphysically necessary. People who argue over that law often do disagree about whether all of its instances are metaphysically necessary, and might be happy to agree for the record that this is what they’re arguing about, at least sometimes. But since the relevance objection to explosion is sometimes being posed by people who think that contradictions are not metaphysically possible, truth-preservation over metaphysically possible worlds can’t be what they’re arguing about. The same goes if we understand truth-preservation as just relating to the actual world, in which case they’d be arguing over whether any contradictions are true. The non-dialetheist relevantists agree with the classicists that no contradictions are true, so that’s not what they’re arguing about either. Now, if you think actual-world truth-preservation is a ridiculous thing for logic to be about, you can have some fun ridiculing Quine:

...the business of formal logic is describable as that of finding statement forms which are logical, in the sense of containing no constants beyond the logical vocabulary, and (extensionally) valid, in the sense that all statements exemplifying the form in question are true. Statements exemplifying such forms may be called logically true. (Quine 1953: 436, his emphasis)
We should note that Quine isn’t saying that everything true is logically true; he’s saying that every instance of a schema that contains no non-logical constants and all of whose instances are true is logically true. The paper is a review of a book by PF Strawson (1952), and he attributes Strawson the same view but with the instances having to be analytic rather than merely true. This makes sense in the context of Strawson and Quine’s differing views over the tenability of the notion of analyticity, and Quine’s avoidance of necessity here is also in keeping with his views about that. Quine’s position does mean putting some weight on a distinction between logical and non-logical vocabulary, but it’s worth noting that fans and detractors of the law of non-contradiction can have their argument over whether all its instances are true without needing to use such a distinction. We only really need such a distinction if we’re trying to distinguish logical truths from non-logical truths.

(As an aside, I really do recommend reading Quine’s review if you’re interested in Quine and have a sort of middling knowledge of his ideas; he says what he thinks about a lot of different things in a fairly casual way, and it’s also the place where the slogan “philosophy of science is philosophy enough” appears in print.)

Getting back to our main thread, the argument between non-relevantists and non-dialetheist relevantists seems like it can’t be about either truth-preservation at the actual world or truth-preservation across all metaphysically possible worlds, because the parties to the disagreement don’t disagree about those things. What other truth-preservation-based options are there? Well, a good place to look is at the model theories for the proposed logics. With relevant logic it’s sometimes a bit tricky how exactly truth-preservation figures in the definition of logical consequence, but to keep things simple let’s look at first degree entailment, or FDE, which is the extensional base for a lot of relevant logics. Suppose the relevantist and the classicist are arguing over what the One True Logic is for sentences with no conditionals or modal operators: just sentence letters, negation, conjunction and disjunction. (The example should work equally well with or without allowing quantifiers.) They might both agree that metaphysical possibility is represented by classical models, and that classical logic describes truth-preservation across metaphysically possible worlds. Nonetheless, the relevantist thinks that the (extensional fragment of the) One True Logic corresponds to truth-preservation across FDE models, in which sentences can be true, false, both, or neither, and the classicist thinks it corresponds to the classical models. Classical logic validates explosion and FDE doesn’t.

To describe their disagreement as being about truth-preservation we want some neutral description of the class of things they think the One True Logic corresponds to truth-preservation over, and then they can disagree over whether that class of things corresponds to the class of FDE models or the class of classical models. What might that class of things be? It can’t be metaphysically possible worlds, as we’ve seen. I think the most promising option is probably something along the lines of information states. (Sometimes people actually do talk about FDE as modelling information states; I didn’t just make it up.) It’s characteristic of information states that they can be incomplete, and on the FDE picture they can also be inconsistent, even if the world itself can’t.4

For these purposes, an information state isn’t supposed to just be any old set of sentences. The classicist obviously thinks that’s too broad, but so does the relevantist. If an FDE model says P is true then it also has to say P∨Q is true, for example. Now, it’s plausible enough that if you already have the information that P is true, then in a sense it wouldn’t be new information to learn that P∨Q is also true. In a sense it might be new information, since you might have the information that P but not have inferred that P∨Q. But it still seems there’s a sense in which it wouldn’t be new information, and that’s roughly the sense that delimits the notion of an information state that the classicist and relevantist are arguing over, if they're arguing over information states at all.

If we want to use this as part of an argument that logic isn’t normative, we need to think a bit more about what this sense of an information state is, because the sense in question might itself be normative. Basically, we might be dealing with a notion of an information state that’s good in some way. Maybe it’s good in that it contains all the information that might be rationally permissible for someone in a given situation to use, or just in that it’s closed under rationally permissible inference, where this is understood independently of the model theory, perhaps in terms of proof rules. (The information states may also need to be prime; although see note 3 above.) But these notions involving rational permissibility are normative. If we want a descriptive notion, the most promising place to look seems to me to be psychology. Maybe people have some operations that they perform to round out their information states, and logic is about truth-preservation over information states closed under those operations. That seems to make sense, and it seems plausibly non-normative, but it’s psychologism, and psychologism isn’t in fashion. Some people will tell you Frege refuted it. I wouldn’t go that far and expect it’ll get rehabilitated sooner or later; I read a New York Times review by James Ryerson (2018) that made it sound like Irad Kimhi (2018) has been trying to rehabilitate psychologism in some form, although possibly quite a different form from the one I gestured at a moment ago. (I haven’t read Kimhi’s book myself and get the impression I might not fully understand what he was up to in it if I did, if only because I’m pretty clueless about Hegel.) Nonetheless, my understanding is that psychologism isn’t back in fashion yet and I think that psychologism is where we’ve ended up if we want to diagnose the relevance objection to explosion as being both descriptive and about truth-preservation.

Old Fashioned Intuitionism

In her discussion of the demarcation argument, Russell says something about intuitionistic logic that suggests she might think there actually are at least some disputes about what the right logic is that aren’t descriptive disputes about truth-preservation. I’ll quote the whole paragraph so that if I missed some important context you don’t end up missing it too:

But there is also a stronger, more worrying, version of the demarcation argument. It asks what the results of logical inquiry are actually telling us. What do E-sentences like ¬¬P ⊨ P mean? What makes them true or false? The answer, as it often does, seems clear at first: it means P is a logical consequence of ¬¬P. There are no interpretations on which P is true and ¬¬P is not [sic; I think this should be "no interpretations on which ¬¬P is true and P is not" - MBC]. But now we find that intuitionists and classical logicians disagree about whether this is so. The classical logician says that ¬¬P ⊨ P is true. Asked to support this claim she may offer a short model-theoretic argument: on any interpretation on which ¬¬P is true, P is true as well and this is all that is required for logical consequence. The intuitionist disagrees. They say that ¬¬P ⊨ P is false and (let’s assume that they are a modern sort of intuitionist, happy to characterise their view in terms of truth-preservation across interpretations in Kripke-models) denies the classical logician’s claim about interpretations. They say that there are Kripke models and interpretations on such models on which ¬¬P is true but P is false. (The classical logician denies that these are interpretations – i.e. denies that these are genuine counterexamples to DNE.) (Russell 2020: 377–8, emphasis mine)
Let’s grant that Russell’s account of the disagreement between intuitionists and classicists as being a descriptive disagreement about truth-preservation is correct for modern sorts of intuitionist. What about the other sort of inutitionist? Would the disagreement between them and the classicists be a counterexample to Russell’s view?

Maybe the old-fashioned intuitionist can say the same kind of thing about ¬¬P ⊨ P that our non-dialetheist relevantist says about P, ¬P ⊨ Q: it isn’t metaphysically possible for the premises to be true and the conclusion false, but it takes more than that for an inference to be valid, and this inference doesn’t meet the other criteria. The logic that captures all the criteria for validity is intuitionistic logic, and this can be mathematically defined by its proof theory, or with Heyting algebras, or with Kripke frames. The fact that the Kripke frame definition is extensionally correct doesn’t point to any particular interpretation of the frames as possible states of the world. Perhaps we can think of them as information states while maintaining that what counts as an information state is itself normative, just as we could with relevant logic. As evidence that the intuitionists are serious that they really don’t think it’s possible for ¬¬P to be true and P not be true, they can even point to the fact that ¬(¬¬P & ¬P) is a theorem of intuitionistic logic.

I think that if you can find an old-fashioned intuitionist then they may well have every right to say this sort of thing. Even so, there are at least two ways for Russell to argue that even if old-fashioned intuitionism is technically a counterexample to her account of logical disagreement, it isn’t a very good one. One option is to point out that old-fashioned intuitionism is old-fashioned for a reason, and while they may have been arguing with the classicists over something normative, it’s not something we consider worth arguing over anymore. Of course there’s nothing to stop someone raising their hand in the Q&A after someone defends a logical schema on grounds of truth-preservation, and saying “I don’t care if all instances of this schema preserve truth; you still shouldn’t be making these inferences, and in my book that means it’s not valid!” Perhaps a debate will ensue; perhaps it will get shut down. It is in any case possible to have these debates; the question is whether they are worth having, and whether the debates logicians deem worth having are of this kind. Perhaps old-fashioned intuitionism is old-fashioned because logicians in their wisdom decided that this was not something worth arguing over.

Another option arguably doesn’t even concede that old-fashioned intuitionism is a counterexample. Sometimes philosophers have debates and don’t fully understand what they’re debating about. That’s why they write papers with titles like “What we disagree about when we disagree about ontology” (Dorr 2009), and why I can wind up thinking that “when we argue over what the right logic is, what are we arguing about?” is the central question in the philosophy of logic. It’s why we so often take seriously the possibility that the participants in a debate may be talking past each other, and it’s why Peter van Inwagen can write papers explaining that he doesn’t understand something and he doesn’t think anyone else does either (e.g. van Inwagen (1981)). In this light, maybe what’s old-fashioned about old-fashioned intuitionism isn’t that they weren’t arguing about truth-preservation; it’s that they were working before Kripke had helped them figure out that they were. Of course an intuitionist could refuse to get with the programme (if indeed this is the programme), but then they’d be dealt with as in the previous paragraph, getting told by the wider community of logicians that they don’t have to go home but they can’t stay here.

Now I don’t think this kind of response is available in the case of non-dialetheist relevantism, simply because the relevantist so plainly wants more out of a notion of validity than necessary truth-preservation. Anderson et al (1975 & 1992) was called Entailment: The Logic of Relevance and Necessity because it was about the programme in logic that tries to capture a notion of entailment that is both relevant and necessarily truth-preserving. Maybe a time will come when information states get thoroughly psychologized and we’ll be able to understand relevance non-normatively and in terms of truth-preservation, and then those old-fashioned relevantists that remain may be told to go home too. But we’re not there yet, and if psychologism’s poor reputation is earned, we should hope that we never will be.

Logical Pluralism

I’ve said a lot about why I don’t think logic is just a descriptive subject concerned with truth-preservation, and it’s coming from the perspective of my positive view about what we disagree about when we disagree about logic, but I’ve kind of danced around that positive view so far and now I’ll be a bit more explicit about how it goes.

Suppose we have a claim about logical consequence, just considered as such and not further interpreted as being about normativity, necessity, truth-preservation or anything else. Just a claim about, as they say, what follows from what. Claims like that are thought to have implications of various kinds, principally for how we should reason and for metaphysical possibility but perhaps for other things too. With a bit of imagination you could probably find all sorts of places to plug a logical consequence relation into a philosophical theory.

I think that this picture leaves logical consequence itself a bit mysterious, and so I’d prefer to argue over the supposed implications directly. If you want to argue over whether contradictions are metaphysically possible, just go ahead and argue over it. If you want to argue over which inferences people should be making, then argue over that. We don’t need to displace these debates to the question of what the right logic is tout court. And in particular, we don’t always have to give the same logic as our answer. The non-dialetheist relevantists are already doing this, giving a different answer to the questions of whether it’s metaphysically possible for explosion’s premises to be true and its conclusion not and whether it’s rationally permissible to infer explosion’s conclusion from its premises.

We also don’t just have two questions, one metaphysical and one normative. At least on the normative side, there are many questions to ask. MacFarlane (2004: 7) has a long list of possible bridge principles getting us from logically valid sequents to norms on thought. Some examples:

  • If A, B ⊨ C, then . . .
    • Co+: If you believe A and you believe B, you ought to believe C
    • Bp+: if you may believe A and believe B, you may believe C
    • Wr+: you have reason to see to it that if you believe A and you believe B, you believe C

MacFarlane adds that these can also all be replaced by versions beginning “If you know that A, B ⊨ C, then…”. For each of those bridge principles we can take a logic and ask whether the corresponding rule always holds for it. Maybe in practice a logic that works with one bridge principle will usually work with the others, or at least the others we’re interested in, but the point is that they’re all meaningful questions, and we might expect that more than one of the questions is interesting. And perhaps MacFarlane’s list, long as it is, doesn’t exhaust all the possibilities. Indeed, I don’t think it does. Here are two other avenues. First, the rules in MacFarlane’s list are all based on material conditionals, (the conditionals here are to be understood materially) but there are other conditionals to be had and these might give different rules. Second, Kwasi Wiredu (1973) makes a distinction between deducibility and inferability, and a related distinction between hypothetical arguments that bring out the consequences of something we may not believe, as in a conditional proof or a reductio ad absurdum, and categorical arguments where we accept some premises and draw a conclusion from them. He argues that some logical schemas are good for one of these notions and not for the other. The distinctions don’t appear in any obvious way in MacFarlane’s list, so that gives us some more questions to explore.

Something to note is that if you want to ask these questions without a robust notion of logical consequence itself, you’ll want to have some independent understanding of metaphysical necessity, or good inference, or whatever it is the question is about. And in fact I do think that it’s good to have notions of those things that aren’t confined to what could be explained by something resembling logical consequence; for example I think metaphysical necessity is also useful for explaining the difference between a physical law and a mere regularity, and perhaps we should have a notion of good inference that applies to both deductive and non-deductive inferences. I don’t expect everyone to agree with me about this, and I see how if a robust notion of logical consequence really could explain both the metaphysical side and the normative side then that would be an attractive thing to have. But we don’t have to decide this now. We debate the first order issues, we put forward accounts of what the debates are really about and debate those too, and we don’t need to prejudge the question of whether the debates are all really about the same thing.

I should spell something out because people have sometimes been unhappy about it when I’ve talked about it before. The different questions we can ask about logical schemas like “are all their instances true?”, “are all their instances metaphysically necessary?” and “is it always permissible to accept the conclusion when it’s permissible to accept all the premises?” are not supposed to give candidate necessary and sufficient conditions for notions of logical truth or validity. When we ask if any instances of “Fn&¬Fn” are true we’re asking exactly the same question about that schema as we can ask about the schema “n is a cat”. In practice the schemas we ask about will often contain no paradigmatically non-logical vocabulary simply because the questions will otherwise tend not to be both interesting and amenable to the methods logicians use. But there’s no need for a demarcation between the logical and the non-logical, or between the questions of this form that are and aren’t legitimate. This relieves the theoretical burden of attempting to give candidate necessary and sufficient conditions for logical truth or validity (since we can have a lot of the debates we want to have without doing so), but it also has the practical benefit of legitimating logics of things like belief, knowledge, obligation, obviousness or whatever that seem to use concepts that aren’t clearly logical but do seem to have a logic in a way that the concept of a cat perhaps does not. Rather than taking a logic as a whole and asking if it’s the One True Logic, we can look at an individual schema, a collection of schemas or even the schemas defining a whole logic and ask whether those schemas satisfy a particular condition. Other (perhaps less interesting) schemas will probably satisfy the condition too, and that’s fine: the inquiry is open-ended.

These days there’s a fair bit of logical pluralism about, considered as a broad category of views united by the idea that there may be more than one correct logic. The picture I’ve described above is the version of logical pluralism I like. Now, considered from a distance it seems like on this picture there’s a whole array of different questions which might have different logics as the answers to them, and different combinations of positions one might adopt. I have thought quite a lot about some of the questions, but I do sometimes worry that a lot of them will end up collapsing into each other, leaving a lot less fun to be had and leaving a lot of logics sitting in the textbooks unused. But even if we end up landing on one true logic with all the metaphysical and normative implications you might expect, it still seems to me that we should start out with the approach I’ve described, and I still hold out hope of ending up somewhere interesting.

The Organon

So I’ve proposed that we break down the question of what the right logic is into a bunch of different questions, some normative and some descriptive. (The normative side seems to have a lot more, but the descriptive side has material and necessary truth-preservation, and there’s no telling what questions psychologists may come up with.) There are well formed questions of both kinds, and even when you hold the answers to the descriptive questions fixed, the answers to the normative questions don’t become obvious or trivial. But I think that even if we accept all this, there’s a worry that the normative questions might be somehow second-rate.

Think about what the people investigating the descriptive side get to do. For the semantics aspect they get to engage with linguistics, psychology, maybe computer science; for the metaphysics they might get to engage with physics, and both camps get to to do the pure maths side of things. The descriptive camp's findings thus stand to have an air of impressiveness to them. The normative side seems to risk being rather less impressive, offering recommendations and expressing preferences. Instead of proofs and experiments and citations of science journals, we have handwaving, table-thumping, and appeals to the great importance of believing the true and nothing but the true. It might seem like a serious scholar would prefer to stick to the hard-nosed descriptive stuff and let people use that information how they will.

I don’t think this is something we should panic about, but we don’t have to write it off as a concern altogether either. The first thing to note is that even if philosophers haven’t got much business arguing for one or other logic as the answer to a normative question, they still need to develop the logics for people to choose from. If the non-dialetheist relevantists are any indication, the logics motivated by normativity rather than (mere) truth-preservation may also be rather more complicated. This means that the philosophers will need to think about the normative questions so that they know what kinds of options people are going to want. Even if the normative questions are not the target of the research, they can still motivate the research. However, in practice we can expect that this thinking about what kind of normative options people might want will sometimes be elaborate enough that the normative questions do become the target of at least some of the research.

This doesn’t strike me as a problem, but that may be because I’m on the other side anyway. I think the normative questions are serious philosophical questions in their own right and it is the business of philosophers to investigate them. In short, it’s epistemology. Back in the day people used to use the term ‘logic’ to cover a lot of what we’d now think of as epistemology, and Aristotle’s so-called logical works include the Posterior Analytics as well as the Prior Analytics (plus the Categories, Topics, Sophistical Refutations and On Interpretation, and sometimes the Rhetoric and the Poetics). This isn’t for nothing, since in many ways the normative side of logic is about the justification of beliefs (typically by inferences from other beliefs), and that makes it epistemology. In the MacFarlane quote earlier he said that logic was crowded on all sides by psychology, metaphysics, mathematics, and semantics, and I wouldn’t be sorry to see it crowded on a fifth side by epistemology if it meant the normative logical questions were getting taken seriously.

One last thing I thought I’d mention is about a debate between Aristotelians and Stoics a long time ago. Stoics divided philosophy into ethics, physics (which included a lot of what we’d now call science but also some of what we’d still call philosophy), and logic (which included a lot of epistemology). The Aristotelians didn’t think of logic (and epistemology) as a separate branch like that; they thought of it as a tool used by the other branches. They accordingly called Aristotle’s logical works the Organon, which means ‘tool’. That’s my understanding of how it went, anyway. I don’t really know the history and the similarity between what happened then and what I’ve been talking about here may be superficial, but I’ll continue. (Regular readers may recall me talking about this dispute over the status of logic before.) Suppose that the normative questions really are either straightforward given the answers to the descriptive questions or somehow not amenable to philosophical argument. Then we’re left with logic as Russell conceives it, a descriptive discipline involving maths, linguistics, probably psychology, but perhaps not a great deal of philosophy as such, at least as we currently think of it. (There’s admittedly probably some metaphysics in there.) This corresponds to the Aristotelian position: on this model logic is news philosophers can use, but it’s not really philosophy proper. If we like Quinean naturalized epistemology, we might even want to view the rest of epistemology the same way, recapturing the Aristotelian vision of the relationship between logic/epistemology and the rest of philosophy. On the picture I favour, the normative questions aren’t straightforward, are amenable to philosophical argument, and aren’t reducible to descriptive questions about something else. That puts me on the side with the Stoics.

As I say, I may have the history wrong and the parallel may be superficial in any case. But even if it wasn’t the debate the Stoics and Aristotelians were having, I think there’s still a debate to be had. Is logic normative? I think it is, at least sometimes, and when it is, it blends into epistemology. But if the interesting part of epistemology isn’t normative, then the interesting part of logic probably isn’t normative either.

Notes

[1] I’ll mostly be talking as if there was a straightforward normative/descriptive distinction, and Russell’s argument is framed more or less in those terms, but I think a lot of what she says and what I’m saying would probably still make sense even if there wasn’t a straightforward distinction to be had.

[2] The argument comes in Metaphysics IV 4, and I understand there's a large literature on it, which I regret to report I have not read, aside from Dutilh Novaes (2019). I'm not a fan of the law of non-contradiction and my hope is that what's correct in Aristotle's argument can be explained in terms of a conflict between accepting and rejecting the same proposition, rather than between accepting both a proposition and its negation. (My view, following e.g. Smiley (1996) is that rejecting a proposition and accepting its negation aren't the same thing.)

[3] Filter logics, so called because you get the consequence relation by taking the consequence relation of an irrelevant logic and applying a relevance filter of some kind to it, are mentioned in Priest (2008:173–4). Aside from as a curiosity or just to illustrate a bad approach to securing relevance, I don't really know what they're for. It possible they're not for anything else, but I expect they do have some independent interest, although as I say I don't know what it is.

[4] The apparent fact that information states can be incomplete makes it a bit unsatisfactory to portray the classicist as defending a view about truth-preservation over information states. We might portray the disagreement between fans of FDE and the three-valued logic K3 as being about information states, and K3 still validates explosion, but we’re still left asking where that leaves the classicist. We can get some of the way by saying that information states include classical tautologies for free. You might also wonder why the only admissible information states are prime, in that they must include at least one of P and Q whenever they include P∨Q: can’t someone have the information that P∨Q without having either the information that P or that Q? It’s a fair point, although it can be levelled at the FDE models as much as the classical ones. If both sides expand the class of information states to include any set of sentences closed under their favoured logic, that should give alternative model theories for the same consequence relations, but including non-prime information states. The classicist will also get the information state containing all sentences — FDE had it already — but that doesn’t change the consequence relation either and if they want they can exclude it by fiat. Allowing non-prime models may end up giving the classicist a model theory for classical logic that they can credibly defend as being the appropriate class of information states, although it’s possible there’s a straightforward objection to it that I’ve overlooked. Of course the option including the non-prime models does at least seem to use the logics themselves to define the classes of admissible information states, and this relates to an issue we’ll talk a bit about below.

References

  • Anderson, Alan R. & Belnap, Nuel D. (1975). Entailment: The Logic of Relevance and Neccessity, Vol. I. Princeton University Press.
  • Anderson, Alan Ross ; Belnap, Nuel D. & Dunn, J. Michael (1992). Entailment: The Logic of Relevance and Necessity, Vol. II. Princeton University Press.
  • Dorr, Cian (2005). What we disagree about when we disagree about ontology. In Mark Eli Kalderon (ed.), Fictionalism in Metaphysics. Oxford University Press. pp. 234--86.
  • Dultilh Novaes, Catarina (2019). Aristotle’s Defense of the Principle of Non-contradiction: A Performative Analysis. In D. Gabbay, L. Magnani, W. Park, and A.V. Pietarinen (eds.), Natural Arguments: A Tribute to John Woods. London, College Publications.
  • Field, Hartry (2015). What Is Logical Validity? In Colin R. Caret & Ole T. Hjortland (eds.), Foundations of Logical Consequence. Oxford University Press.
  • James, William (1907). Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking. Duke University Press.
  • Jenkins, C. S. I. (2014). Serious Verbal Disputes: Ontology, Metaontology, and Analyticity. Journal of Philosophy 111 (9/10):454-469
  • Kimhi, Irad (2018). Thinking and Being. Harvard University Press.
  • Lewis, David (1988). Relevant implication. Theoria 54 (3):161-174.
  • MacFarlane, John. (2004). In What Sense (If Any) Is Logic Normative for Thought?. Draft https://johnmacfarlane.net/normativity_of_logic.pdf
  • Priest, Graham (2008). An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic: From If to Is. Cambridge University Press.
  • Quine, Willard V. O. (1951). Two Dogmas of Empiricism. Philosophical Review 60 (1):20–43.
  • Quine, W. V. (1953). Mr. Strawson on logical theory. Mind 62 (248):433-451.
  • Russell, Gillian (2008). One true logic? Journal of Philosophical Logic 37 (6):593 - 611.
  • Russell, Gillian (forthcoming). Logic isn’t normative. Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 1:1-18.
  • Ryerson, James (2018). Unpublished and Untenured, a Philosopher Inspired a Cult Following. New York Times, 26 September 2018. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/26/books/review/irad-kimhi-thinking-and-being.html
  • Smiley, Timothy (1996). Rejection. Analysis 56 (1):1–9.
  • Strawson, P. F. (1952). Introduction to Logical Theory. Routledge.
  • van Inwagen, Peter (1981). Why I Don't Understand Substitutional Quantification. Philosophical Studies 39 (3):281-285.
  • Wiredu, J. E. (1973). Deducibility and inferability. Mind 82 (325):31-55.

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Dialetheism, Duchamp, And DeLoreans

Dialetheism, Duchamp, And DeLoreans

A while ago I read a piece in Aeon by Damon Young and Graham Priest, which argued that Marcel Duchamp's Fountain1 both is and isn't art. Before I read it, I had an idea where they might be going with it and was prepared to be unimpressed. I've got a lot of respect for Graham Priest (I hadn't heard of Damon Young) so I read it anyway, but I was expecting it to be a case of everything looking like a nail when all you've got is a hammer. (Or at least, when you have a hammer you're particularly pleased with.) I'm happy to report that I was wrong, and I suppose I owe them an apology. Sorry. In fact I found the thing so interesting that it's shifted the way I think about dialetheism a bit, or at least crystallized some of my thinking about it.

Three Truth Values In The Fountain

Priest is famously a dialetheist, in that he thinks that some statements are true even though their negations are also true. An example is "this statement is not true". Priest thinks this statement is both true and not true. I'm less confident than he is; I guess I'm probably about 60% sure that it's both true and not true2. Now, once you've decided that contradictions can be true, it gives you a new option for solving other philosophical problems. Often philosophical problems arise because there's a group of statements that all seem compelling, but they're jointly inconsistent. For most of us, this means we have to give one of them up. Dialetheists can accept them all. This is what I was expecting from Young and Priest's Aeon piece. I thought they were going to say that there were compelling reasons to think Fountain is art, and compelling reasons to think it isn't, and then encourage us to embrace the contradiction here as we already should be doing elsewhere.

That's not what they did, though. Instead, they said that its not being art is the very thing that makes it art. Here's one way they explain it:

Fountain can carry the message that it is not art only because it is not art - because its very entry into the artworld is defined by its rejection of art. Had it simply been art in an unproblematic sense - if, for example, Duchamp had chosen to paint an oil painting of a urinal - it could not have carried this message. This contrasts with the sign that is what it is because it has a message inscribed on it. So consider René Magritte's 1928-9 painting of a pipe. This literally bears the message 'Ceci n'est pas une pipe.' The very words carry a message. By contrast, Fountain bears no explicit message. It conveys its message by being what it is. It is not art, and that is how it conveys its message. That is precisely why it is art. Put another way: contradiction is essential to Fountain as art. And if it didn't embody a contradiction, it wouldn't be half as interesting; we wouldn't still be talking about it.

It's just a urinal, so it's not art, but presenting a piece of non-art as Duchamp did lets it convey a message in such a way as to make it count as art. (Even though the message is that it isn't art.) The key thing is that the message only works because it's not art. So if it isn't art then it is art, but this can't prevent it from not being art because if it did then there wouldn't be anything making it art anymore. (You can disagree with their intrerpretation of Fountain itself, but admitting it's an available interpretation should be enough to make the general point about dialetheism.) This back-and-forth dynamic parallels what you get with the liar sentence. If it's not true then it is true, but that can't prevent it from not being true, because then it wouldn't have anything making it true, so it wouldn't be true anymore. And then it would be true, and so on.

This isn't what I was expecting. They haven't just said that there are arguments on both sides and as dialetheists they have the option of accepting both sides; they've given an analysis of Fountain's status that parallels the dynamic with the liar paradox, and it seems reasonable for them to resolve both issues the same way. I think we can all agree that this is much better, and so I was right to pleasantly surprised.

Contradictions, Contradictions Everywhere

Now, one thing that dialetheists sometimes worry about is what stops contradictions being true all over the place. If contradictions can be true, why aren't more of them true? If its being the case that I'm eating cornflakes doesn't prevent it from being the case that I'm not eating cornflakes, what does prevent it? I think this is a very difficult question, and often when I think about it I think that maybe I shouldn't be a 60%-committed dialetheist at all. But dialetheists do have things they say about the issue. In his book Spandrels of Truth, which I'm afraid I haven't read much of, JC Beall argues that dialetheias only show up when we're talking about truth. Dialetheias are a consequence of enriching our language with the kind of truth predicate Beall thinks we should use, and the rest of the language avoids them.3 This gives a nice answer to the question of why there aren't dialetheias everywhere. We'll call someone with a view like that a truth dialetheist.

Unfortunately, the kind of dialetheia Priest and Young talk about suggests the phenomenon is more widespread than that. Perhaps with some purported dialetheias you can argue that they're covertly about truth. I can see someone doing that with Russell's paradox (does the set of all sets that don't contain themselves contain itself?) but with the Fountain case it seems a bit of a stretch. There are other cases dialetheists sometimes argue for too that occasionally seem plausible to me, for example inconsistencies in law, or games, or perhaps ethics. The ones that seem most plausible to me are the ones where a rule applies because it doesn't apply. Young and Priest draw attention to this factor themselves:

It might seem that the paradox of the urinal is a cultural oddity: something that could happen only in the strange world of contemporary art; but, actually, it fits a much larger pattern of something being the case because it is not the case: p because it is not the case that p.

So if you're someone like me, and you quite like the idea of dialetheias that fit this pattern but don't like any others, you've got an option for limiting them besides truth dialetheism. Dialetheias arise when something is a certain way because it isn't that way. To me this seems more satisfying, because if this kind of dynamic doesn't have to generate dialetheias, why does it generate them in the case of semantic paradoxes? There are undoubtedly ways to respond to that challenge, but let's suppose we go for the idea that dialetheias arise whenever something is the case because it isn't, but otherwise they don't arise. We'll call that view explanation dialetheism. This doesn't limit dialetheias as much as truth dialetheism, but it's still supposed to limit them a lot. But can it really do that? Will anything be safe?

Persistent Macroscopic Physical Dialetheias

Here's something Young and Priest say about the law of non-contradiction before explaining how Fountain manages to break it:

[T]he principle of non-contradiction seems so firmly based in common sense. If an animal is a cat, it can't simultaneously not be a cat. It is either Thursday or not Thursday: it can't be both Thursday and not Thursday on the same day, here and now. But beware, as Ludwig Wittgenstein said, of an inadequate diet of examples!

Now, Priest at least is holding back a bit on the esoteric dope here, because he's said things elsewhere that suggest he may think things can simultaneously be cats and not cats, and that it can be both Thursday and not Thursday. He's expressed sympathy (Priest 2006: chs 11-12) with the idea of dialetheias obtaining at the instant of change, so maybe as the clock strikes midnight it's both Thursday and not, and maybe if things become or stop being cats, around the beginning or end of a cat's life, there are things that are both cats and non-cats. But these situations don't last for very long. You don't go to the pet store and come back with something that both is and isn't a cat, and you don't schedule a meeting on Thursday and then wonder whether or not to go on the grounds that it both is and isn't Thursday. (Although people do set deadlines at 23:59 instead of midnight, presumably to avoid this confusion.)

Aside from instants of change, another place to look for physical dialetheias is in quantum mechanics. When things get very small they also get very weird, and dialetheists would be missing a trick if they didn't at least check to see if embracing contradictions can help us interpret quantum mechanics. Priest himself (2006: 180-1) makes this connection, though he does say his speculation is 'perhaps rather fanciful'.

We do still have some common-sense attachment to the law of non-contradiction, though. Maybe we can accept that physical dialetheias obtain for a moment here and there, or at the quantum level, but we don't expect them to hang around for a long time among middle-sized objects. We don't expect persistent macroscopic physical dialetheias. So, if dialetheias are confined to situations where things are a certain way because they're not that way, should we expect PMPDs? I think the answer is that it depends. Let's think about two more paradoxes: the Pinocchio paradox and the grandfather paradox.

The Pinocchio paradox [Eldridge-Smith and Eldridge-Smith 2010] arises because of Pinocchio's nose's disposition to grow when and only when he lies. If he says "my nose will be growing", then his nose should grow iff it doesn't. This fits into the explanation model of dialetheias: the nose will grow because it doesn't, but its growing would prevent it from growing, and so on. This puts pressure on us to make the semantic world and the physical world play by the same rules, because when you're Pinocchio there's a law-like connection between them. I don't really think someone like Beall should be too worried by it, though. And indeed Beall himself wasn't [2011], but his explanation seemed to me to muddy the waters a bit by talking about fiction, so I'll explain in my own way how I think dialetheists should respond to the Pinocchio paradox.

If physical dialetheias are impossible and semantic dialetheias are possible, then it just won't be possible for someone's nose to have the exceptionless disposition to grow when they say something false and not grow when they say something true. We don't worry that it's not possible for someone's nose to have an exceptionless disposition to grow when they're wearing a red sock and not grow when they're wearing a blue sock, on the grounds that there would have to be an exception when they were wearing one of each. The Pinocchio paradox is the same. At least, I think it's the same. Of course, if PMPDs are possible, then Pinocchio's nose could both grow and not grow, and the Pinocchio disposition need not be impossible after all. But the possibility of the disposition turns on the possibility of physical dialetheias, so to say that the Pinocchio paradox problematically commits semantic dialetheists to the possibility of physical dialetheias is question-begging. (It's also possible that you don't need the Pinocchio paradox itself; you could just ask whether Pinocchio's nose grows or not when he says 'this sentence is not true'.)

What about the grandfather paradox? I think that one's actually a lot harder. The grandfather paradox is the old chestnut where a time-traveller goes back and kills their grandfather. This means the time-traveller never gets born, so they never kill their grandfather, so their grandfather lives and they are born after all, and so on. This seems to fit the explanation model of what generates dialetheias perfectly. You're born because you weren't born; your grandfather lives because he doesn't live, and so on.

One resolution is to say that this isn't possible, and if time travel was possible then it would be possible, and so time travel isn't possible either. I don't find that very satisfying, because it doesn't seem like a good enough reason for time travel to be impossible. I fear that if I tried articulating the feeling further I might say something foolish, but perhaps you feel the same way.

A second resolution is to say that time travel is possible, but killing your grandfather before the relevant parent is conceived is not possible. This response says that there are various ways the world might be, and some of them are like those really carefully written sci-fi stories where all the time travel fits together properly, but none of them involve contradictions.

A third resolution is to say that you can go back and kill your grandfather, and this will generate a PMPD that spreads out throughout the universe from the point at which you arrive in the past onwards. We've established that the laws of physics permit killing, and so if they also permit time travel then the laws of logic will just have to deal with it.

What should the dialetheist say here? I think it's a lot harder to deal with this than with the Pinocchio paradox, because the grandfather paradox only uses dispositions that - we're assuming for the sake of argument - we have independent reason to think are possible. Now, I can imagine that some people who think time travel is fine as long as it doesn't generate paradoxes will say that I'm confused. And it's true, I am a bit confused. But I don't think I'm confused about the thing I think they'll think I'm confused about. David Lewis [1976] wrote what has kind of become the classic paper defending the "only non-paradoxical time travel" view, which I called the second resolution. That paper supplies the materials to accuse me of being confused about different contexts for evaluating possibility. When we say the time traveller can kill their grandfather we're holding fixed facts about their dispositions, and when we say they can't we're holding fixed historical facts about how they got there in the first place, and having those dispositions is compatible with having that history. What's incompatible with having that history is manifesting the disposition at that time.

I don't know. It's hard arguing with David Lewis, and I don't really expect to persuade anyone that he's wrong here. So instead I'll try shift the parameters of the debate a bit. They're already shifted somewhat by the fact we're viewing dialetheism as a live option, which Lewis never properly did4. But there's something else going on here. Lewis, in a way, thought that basic physical facts don't really have metaphysical explanations. For Lewis, the universes (he thought there were lots) are just patchworks of local facts. Some look law-governed the way ours seems to; most are a complete mess. But there's no deep metaphysical sense in which one billiard ball hitting another makes the second shoot off to the pocket. One thing happens, another thing happens, we notice patterns and we give explanations in terms of the patterns. But there's no metaphysical explanation there. The proposition that grass is green is true because grass is green. That's real explanation, not just pattern recognition. But causal explanation is just pattern recognition. If the explanation dialetheist adopts this metaphysically lightweight account of causal explanations, they don't have pressure on them to resolve the grandfather paradox the same way they resolve the liar paradox. On this view the world isn't a machine; it's a jigsaw5. There are only so many ways of fitting pieces together, and time-travellers preventing their own births is not one of those ways.

So that's one way for the explanation dialetheist to avoid PMPDs. They can say that basic physical propositions can't be explained by their not being true, on the grounds that they're not really explained at all. But what if you're not a Lewisian/Humean? What if the world is a machine? Well, I think that in that case you've got problems. Cards on the table, I find the machine view of the universe much more appealing than the jigsaw view. And since I also think dialetheism is an appealing solution to the liar paradox but I'm pretty wary of PMPDs, I guess I've got problems. It's an odd combination of views, though. You're probably fine.

Notes

[1] There's some evidence that Duchamp wasn't the artist behind Fountain, and that it was by one of his female friends. The leading contenders are apparently Louise Norton and Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven. I'm not competent to assess the strength of the evidence, and I'll talk as if Duchamp was the artist because that's what Young and Priest do. But bear in mind that it may have actually been by someone else.

[2] 60% is pretty impressionistic, and it isn't based on an explicit calculation. I do find dialethic solutions to the liar paradox the most satisfying, but I don't find them completely satisfying; for example they don't do too well with Curry's paradox. (I don't really think anybody does.) I also don't think the issues are well enough understood yet that anybody should be all that sure about the answer, although prior to knowing what our answers are one might expect him to be entitled to be more confident in his answer than I am in mine, because he's got more information than I have. One other worry I have is that I only prefer the dialethic solutions because I find Priest's writing easier going than Hartry Field's (Field [2008] is probably the main one on this), and so I've read and understood more of it, but if you start worrying about that sort of thing you might end up never being 60% sure of anything.

[3] I'm not sure whether Beall thinks of the language itself as generating the dialetheias, or whether he thinks of the dialethic propositions as being out there already and adding the truth predicate just enables the language to express them. Or perhaps it's a third option I haven't considered. I don't think it matters a great deal for what we're talking about here, and in any case both options seem like possibilities you might want to consider, depending on whether you think of truth as primarily applying to sentences or to propositions.

[4] Lewis declined to write an article for a collection on the law of non-contradiction [Beall, Priest and Armour-Garb 2004], and two letters from him to the editors are included in the collection instead [Lewis 2004]. He basically made the same move GE Moore used to make about hairy metaphysical and sceptical theses: the law of non-contradiction is much more certain than anything you might try to base a refutation of it on.

[5] I owe the idea of jigsaw explanations to Alastair Wilson [2017: n.13], who mentioned the idea in the context of the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics:

It is also to possible to interpret EQM so that Everett worlds are causally isolated from one another, regarding the dynamical connections between worlds as giving rise to non-causal explanations. (Perhaps phenomena in each Everett world are explained non-causally by phenomena in nearby worlds, in the same sort of way that the shape of a jigsaw piece is explained by the shapes of the surrounding pieces.)

I'm not sure whether what he has in mind is the same thing I've got in mind, but that's where I got the metaphor from anyway.

References

  • Beall, JC 2009: Spandrels of Truth (Oxford University Press)
  • Beall, JC. 2011: 'Dialetheists against Pinocchio', Analysis 71(4): 689-91
  • Eldridge-Smith, P. and Eldridge Smith, V. 2010: 'The Pinocchio paradox', Analysis 70(2): 212-215
  • Field, H. H. 2008: Saving Truth From Paradox (Oxford University Press)
  • Lewis, D. 1976: 'The Paradoxes of Time Travel', American Philosophical Quarterly 13(2): 145-152
  • Lewis, D. 2004: 'Letters to Priest and Beall', pp176-7 in Priest, Beall and Armour-Garb [2004]
  • Priest, G., 2006: In Contradiction: A Study of the Transconsistent, 2nd ed., (Oxford University Press)
  • Priest, G., Beall, JC and Armour-Garb, B. 2004: The Law of Non-Contradiction: New Philosophical Eassays (Oxford University Press)
  • Wilson, A. 2017: 'The Quantum Doomsday Argument', British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 68(2): 597-615
  • Young, D. and Priest, G. 'It is and it isn't', Aeon, 22/9/16, https://aeon.co/essays/how-can-duchamp-s-fountain-be-both-art-and-not-art, accessed 31/5/18