Aristotle himself is replying to going concerns about "where justification terminates" and "syllogism skepticism" — Count Timothy von Icarus
This might be a position that could be added to ↪J's initial list of stances. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Once the interpretation of terms like "fact" or "evidence" become dependent on an epistemic stance, we have to look for an interpretative truth that is outside the stance itself. How do we find it? — J
OK. And how do we want to fill in "good"?
— J
I have no idea. If you're just estimating the mean of a data set, sample size 19 and 20 are basically the same thing. It would be really hard to justify one or the other on any purely statistical basis. — fdrake
By hierarchy I meant that there would be direction of influence between things that constitute the stance and things that constitute putatively factual level claims. By denying its existence I meant that a change in the putatively factual level claims may engender a change in what constitutes the stance. I was treating a discovery as a change in putatively factual level claims, specifically the discovery that 2 new data points had the majority of the benefit of 3. And I claim that this triggered evaluating the allocation of resources on that basis, whereas before it was largely a question of scientific accuracy. — fdrake
...a stance toward a stance? A meta-stance? Who knows. Notably all of these answers would be inferential, they involve giving reasons. — fdrake
Whereas, and this is a big complication I think, people may be caused to adopt stances, paradigms of interpretations and so on — fdrake
The "true reason" that someone values what they value might terminate in describing a cause or telling a story, rather than giving a reason. — fdrake
beholden to the aims of instrumental reason — Wayfarer
the subject of merely propositional knowledge — Wayfarer
And that sounds rather like a belief, doesn't it? — Wayfarer
I find the peremptory description of 'anti-realist' unsatisfactory. — Wayfarer
The realist should reject voluntarism about stances, and so insist that their stance is tied to theoretical reasons. . . . My suggestion is that the realist should maintain that their realist stance is rationally obligatory. How might this defense go? — Pincock, 7
A realist who is also a voluntarist about stances will admit to their own realist stance, but also allow that there is no reason that obliges them to adopt that realist stance. Consider a claim to knowledge that the realist advances on the basis of their evidence and their realist stance, such as Franklin’s L. A realist who is also a voluntarist about stances and who reflects on this situation is immediately landed in a pragmatically incoherent situation. . . . First, they put forward the claim L as something they believe to be true. Second, they are aware that this belief is due in part to their realist stance. Third, as a voluntarist about stances, they admit that they have not adopted their realist stance on the basis of any reasons that reflect the truth.
As we have seen, the voluntarist explains the adoption of a stance by appeal to the person’s desires and values. If these desires and values have no connection to the truth, then the realist must admit that their resulting beliefs are not appropriately connected to the truth, and so not known. . . . The realist must admit to themselves that they know they could acquire this belief whether it was true or not. This is the pragmatic incoherence: by the realist’s own lights, one of their beliefs, which they take to be true, is also something that they admit to themselves that they would have whether it was true or not. The only way to restore coherence and to maintain one’s voluntarism about one’s stance is to withdraw any claim to know that is based on one’s stance. For the realist, this means abandoning their realism. — Pincock, 5-6
An epistemic stance is an orientation, a collection of attitudes, values, aims, and other commitments relevant to thinking about scientific ontology, including policies or guidelines for the production of putatively factual beliefs . . . — Chakravartty, 1308
Let me generalize this contention [that stance voluntarism is inconsistent with realism] in a way that I believe Pincock would accept, by parity of reasoning: in this case (ex hypothesi) no one would have a reason to adopt their own or any other rational stance – the concern presumably applies across the board – because there is no rational obligation to go one way or another. Lacking rational obligations and recognizing the rationality of those with conflicting stances, it would be indefensible, incoherent even, to adopt any such option. — Chakravartty, 1311-12
The very idea that a given stance must be rationally obligatory to be rationally chosen is precisely what stance voluntarism denies. . . . On the voluntarist view, rational choice and rational obligation are distinct concepts and cannot be run together. — Chakravartty, 1312
But this would require something more than what has been provided [by Pincock]: a compelling argument for . . . a theory of rationality in light of which such a demonstration could be given. This, however, is a tall order. — Chakravartty, 1312
Your use of scare-quotes around "true reason" says it all: Are we willing to accept a cause or a narrative as a reason? — J
It would not be a theoretical reason, as Pincock understands one. And here the question of level is really critical. If you tell me your belief in ghosts is caused by growing up around people who believed in ghosts, I'll say "Thanks much" and completely ignore this as a reason for me to believe in ghosts. From a rationalist perspective, a reason is supposed to be "for everybody." Chakravartty and Pincock both discuss this, and as you'd imagine, Chakravartty believes some reasons can be valid for you but not for me, while Pincock thinks this is loose talk, and that a "true reason" asks for universal consent.
It's difficult to make something a story beat if it resists any sense of narrative. — fdrake
Even if people agreed that, like in the second story, the man's feeling made him stand up, it serves as a reason for him standing up only by narrative juxtaposition/co-contextualising the feeling and standing up. And that's something I did in writing the sentences, not the hypothetical man standing up. — fdrake
You don't need the content of a cause to be reasonable, or even explicable, just to notice that it really is a cause. — fdrake
a meta-methodological commitment to believing things that seem to be true regardless of why — fdrake
You do need the content to be reasonable if we're working toward warranted belief. — J
Are you saying that the man, if we asked him why he stood up, would deny the feeling as a cause, or say he wasn't aware of it? — J
Sorry -- regardless of why we believe them, or regardless of why they're true? — J
But for the man, as I think you're saying, it can't be a reason unless he goes beyond "narrative juxtaposition" and actually accepts the account. — J
Pincock distinguishes Franklin’s epistemic stance from another one that Franklin might have taken. He might have said, “I’m disposed to claim to know L when I have this kind of evidence. It’s just what I do, or what seems best to me; others may do differently.” For Pincock, this wouldn’t give Franklin reasons for his claim that L. Pincock asks us to imagine how this “non-theoretical” Franklin would respond to a challenge to his claim about L: He has nothing at his disposal that would count as a reason for others to adopt, so he would have to be silent in the face of his challengers. The actual Franklin, though, scientific realist that he was, can reply with an account that involves how evidence is connected to knowledge claims. — J
1. Whatever is scientifically known [i.e., known as necessary, through its causes] must be demonstrated.
2. The premises of a demonstration must be scientifically known.
[Critics] then argued that demonstration is impossible with the following dilemma:
1. If the premises of a demonstration are scientifically known, then they must be demonstrated.
2. The premises from which each premise are demonstrated must be scientifically known.
3. Either this process continues forever, creating an infinite regress of premises, or it comes to a stop at some point.
4. Either it continues forever, then there are no first premises from which the subsequent ones are demonstrated, and so nothing is demonstrated.
5. On the other hand, if it comes to a stop at some point, then the premises at which it comes to a stop are undemonstrated and therefore not scientifically known; consequently, neither are any of the others deduced from them [how Wittgenstein is often interpreted].
6. Therefore, nothing can be demonstrated [or at least not prompter quid, from causes, from premises that are better known than their conclusions].
A second group accepted the agnostics’ view that scientific knowledge comes only from demonstration but rejected their conclusion by rejecting the dilemma [see PA 1.3]. Instead, they maintained:
1. Demonstration “in a circle” is possible, so that it is possible for all premises also to be conclusions and therefore demonstrated.
Aristotle does not give us much information about how circular demonstration was supposed to work, but the most plausible interpretation would be supposing that at least for some set of fundamental principles, each principle could be deduced from the others. (Some modern interpreters have compared this position to a coherence theory of knowledge.)
I dont get why people even argue about this kinda shit.. — DifferentiatingEgg
1. Whatever is scientifically known [i.e., known as necessary, through its causes] must be demonstrated. . . . et al.
But Aristotle reasons:
If the skeptic is right, discursive knowledge is impossible.
But discursive knowledge is possible.
Therefore the skeptic is wrong. — Count Timothy von Icarus
(Note, if the skeptic rebuts this claim, they cannot possibly claim to know their own rebuttal's truth without contradicting themselves). — Count Timothy von Icarus
something that is held on unconditional grounds that connect to a sense of being that is non-propositional. — Wayfarer
By conflating pragmatic coherence with rational obligation, Pincock oversimplifies the range of legitimate epistemic responses. Instrumentalism, for instance, operates within a perfectly coherent rational framework yet explicitly avoids metaphysical commitments—a stance that clearly avoids the "pragmatic incoherence" Pincock accuses voluntarists of. — Wayfarer
Ummm . . . but you don't think this works, do you? How does it not simply beg the question?
That would depend on whether the skeptic believes that it's discursive knowledge itself which is leading them to conclude that discursive knowledge is impossible. I have little sympathy myself for radical skepticism, but in fairness I think the skeptic can rebut the claim without also needing to claim that the rebuttal is discursive knowledge. Or, if "rebut" is too strong, let's say "show the claim to be highly implausible."
I understand that noesis and intellectus are meant to come to the rescue here, as in so many other places where Greek thought is contrasted with 20th century emphases on strictly (and literally) "rational" thought. Making this rescue attempt attractive is hard, even though I suspect it's correct in some fundamental ways. I'm reminded of this, above:
I suppose there's a couple of types of content involved. If you established that X causes Y through an experiment, then that's an excellent justification for believing it. But that's far for explaining why X causes Y. So if someone were to say "X happened, that's why Y happened", and someone challenged it: "Why?", you could point to the experiment. But that doesn't tell you the mechanism, it doesn't explicate the why. It demonstrates it. The first type of content would be what suffices to demonstrate truth, the second type of content would be what serves as an explication. They both might work as reasons, but they don't both work as stories or explications, and only attempting to specify a mechanism would tell you why.
So I suppose what I'm saying is that the content of the claim doesn't need to make any kind of sense to serve as an excellent justification, it just needs to be established as true. And in context noting causes, without any further commitment to mechanism or generality, might serve as a terminus of giving reasons. Putting it in -isms, a kind of foundationalism which uses every passing contingency. — fdrake
Regardless of why we believe them if they are believed because they're true. Or just because they're true, regardless of why we believe them. Like the break up because of the uncomfortable clothes. True, utterly useless as an explication, and no one would believe it because it's not a cromulent story. — fdrake
"They broke up because they had an argument, largely caused by how each was feeling physically" seems believable enough. "She left him because of his itchy underwear" — J
Ummm . . . but you don't think this works, do you? How does it not simply beg the question?
Points 1-6 are a discursive demonstration. The skeptic is claiming to have demonstrated that discursive knowledge through demonstration is impossible through the use of discursive demonstration. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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