Eliminativism without truth part 1
E. Feser
Eliminativism without truth, Part II
E. Feser
Quote:...Rosenberg has dismissed the incoherence charge as “puerile,” but here he characterizes it as “powerful” and “serious.” Evidently, what he regards as puerile is the suggestion that eliminativism can quickly be refuted simply by attributing to the eliminativist the pragmatically self-contradictory belief that there are no beliefs. As I have always acknowledged, Rosenberg is correct in holding that eliminativism cannot be refuted that easily. The eliminativist can without difficulty simply avoid using “I believe that…” and similar locutions. The real question is whether he can entirely avoid making use of notions which at least implicitly presuppose the intentionality and semantic content that eliminativism denies. Rosenberg cites Lynne Rudder Baker’s Saving Belief as the “best” presentation of this more sophisticated sort of objection. (I develop this sort of objection in the last chapter of The Last Superstition, and also in some of the posts linked to above.)
In this new paper, Rosenberg not only takes the problem seriously, but calls attention himself to the way certain notions that those beholden to naturalism might think unproblematic are unavailable to a consistent eliminativist. In his understanding both of the implications of naturalism and the gravity of the problems facing certain defenses of it, Rosenberg simply outclasses not only its pop science advocates (Dawkins, Krauss, Coyne, Stenger, et al.) but also many of its philosophical defenders (such as Dennett, and the more aggressive among Thomas Nagel’s critics).
That is one reason to read him. Another, though, is to see just how miserably even the most careful defender of eliminativism fails to defend it against the charge of incoherence. For fail miserably he does.
Eliminativism without truth, Part II
Quote:We’re looking at Alex Rosenberg’s attempt to defend eliminative materialism from the charge of incoherence in his paper “Eliminativism without Tears.” Having set out some background ideas in an earlier post, let’s turn to the essay itself. It has four main parts: two devoted to arguments for eliminativism, and two devoted to responses to the charge of incoherence. I’ll consider each in turn.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
(This post was last modified: 2019-08-03, 08:28 PM by Sciborg_S_Patel.)
- Bertrand Russell