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Title: Natural Kinds, Naturalistic Epistemology and Philosophical Method


1
Natural Kinds, Naturalistic Epistemology and
Philosophical Method
  • Richard Boyd
  • October 2007

2
Big Questions
  • Goodman, The New Riddle of Induction
  • Quine, Natural Kinds and Epistemology
    Naturalized
  • ? Renewed interest in philosophical naturalism
  • Naturalism? About kind? About epistemology?
    About metaphysics?
  • Philosophical naturalism?
  • Relationship between philosophy and (other)
    sciences?

3
BIG CONCLUSIONS METAPHYSICS OF KINDS
  • KINDS ARE DISCIPLINE SPECIFIC SOCIAL ARTIFACTS
  • REALITY OF KINDS CONTRIBUTION TO
    ACCOMMODATION OF DISCIPLINARY PRACTICES TO CAUSAL
    STRUCTURES
  • REALISM STILL OK
  • NEED TO REFORMULATE MIND INDEPENDENCE SOCIAL
    PRACTICES ARE METAPHYSICALLY INNOCENT

4
BIG CONCLUSIONS EPISTEMOLOGY
  • NO FOUNDATIONS RELIABILITY OF METHODS IS
    RADICALLY CONTINGENT
  • NO CONTEXT OF DISCOVERY VS CONTEXT OF
    CONFIRMATION
  • NO INTERNAL VS EXTERNAL FACTORS
  • NO A PRIORI CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS
  • NO TRANSPARENCY RE SOURCES OF SCIENTIFIC
    JUDGMENTS
  • NEEDED AN EPISTEMOLOGY OF INEXPLICIT INSIGHT,
    ERROR RE ACCOMMODATION
  • (ALMOST) ALL EPISTEMOLOGY IS (NATURALISTIC)
    SOCIAL EPISTEMOLOGY

5
BIG CONCLUSIONS SEMANTICS AND REPRESENTATION
  • REFERENCE LANGUAGE MEDIATED ACCOMMODATION
  • REFERENCE ? SOME LY TRUE CONCEPTIONS, LY
    RELIABLE METHODS
  • ?ANY A PRIORI (EVEN LY) TRUE/RELIABLE
    CONCEPTIONS, METHODS. INDEED,
  • CONCEPTUALLY CENTRAL BELIEFS/INFERENTIAL
    PRACTICES SOMETIMES IRREDEEMABLY FLAWED!
  • TRUTH, REFERENCE ARE EPISTEMIC NOTIONS
  • NEEDED SEMANTICS OF INSIGHT/ERROR TO GO WITH THE
    EPISTEMOLOGY OF INSIGHT
  • TRUTH/FALSITY SPECIAL CASES OF SUCCESSFUL/FAILED
    ACCOMMODATION

6
Background Philosophy of Science, I
Projectibility and Confirmation
  • To a good first approximation
  • At time, t, in research community, C, T is highly
    confirmed by evidence, E,
  • ?
  • T is projectible by standards current in C at
    t,
  • AND
  • E favors T over all relevant alternatives (
    rival theories also projectible _at_ C, t)
  • AND
  • E was gathered so as to control for artifacts
    suggested by theories projectible _at_ C, t.
  • WHERE Projectibility plausibility given the
    theories best established _at_ C, t.

7
Background Philosophy of Science, II
Projectibility is Evidential
  • Projectibility, unprojectibility are evidential _at_
    C, t
  • Theory, T, is projectible ? already some
    indirect evidence _at_ C, t for T
  • T is unprojectible ? already some indirect
    evidence _at_ C, t against T
  • Projectibility comes in degrees
  • T is highly projectible no highly projectible
    rival ? minimal additional evidence required
  • T is highly unprojectible ? Ignore T altogether

8
Example Neutrinos
  • Puzzle ß-decay. Neutron gives off electron to
    become proton
  • E.g, 3H ? 3He e- (Tritium to helium 3 an
    electron)
  • 1913 discovered that total energy 3H gt energy
    3He energy e-
  • Energy not conserved??
  • 1930 Wolfgang Pauli new particle 1933 F.
    Perrin (almost) massless!
  • Projectible just because preserves conservation
    of energy
  • Experimental confirmation
  • 1956 Faint light emissions 15 microseconds
    apart in tank of CdCl2 solution near nuclear
    reactor predicted by theory of neutrinos (Reines
    and Cowan). Neutrinos detected! Nobel Prize to
    Reines 1995.
  • Role of projectibility
  • Suppose theory of neutrinos predicts flashing
    lights but no crisis re conservation of energy
  • Then, theory of massless particle not
    projectible
  • Experiment no evidence at all for neutrinos!
  • But T highly projectible, so experiment counts
    as neutrino detection

9
Objectivity Reliability of Theory Dependent
Methods
  • Basic methodological rule Carefully choose from
    among relevant alternatives ( theories
    recommended by best current theories),
    controlling for effects suggested by best current
    theories.
  • Why is this rule reliable? In particular, what
    makes relying on current theories reliable?
  • NOT Their currency
  • IN FACT ly their approximate truth
  • Basic rule reliable ly to the extent that
    current theories are relevantly ly true!
  • So, for any C, t, Methods in C at t are
    reliable is
  • highly contingent and
  • anything but a priori
  • So, there are no foundational inductive methods!

10
The Naturalistic Epistemology of Objectivity, I
Context of Discovery and Context of Confirmation?
  • Rule for objective testing Test T under
    circumstances where its most likely to go wrong
    if its not (relevantly, approximately) true.
  • Rule for identifying such circumstances Refer to
    alternative projectible theories.
  • When is rule reliable?
  • Simple answer _at_ (C, t,) just when often enough
    te truth is among projectible alternatives.
  • Naturalistic answer _at_ (C, t), just when, often
    enough, te truth is among alternatives actually
    proposed and publicized as projectible.
  • Whats implied?
  • Appropriately reliable cognitive/conceptual
    structures
  • Appropriate social structures of scientific
    communication
  • Appropriate patterns of funding, encouragement
    of research directions,
  • ? No distinction contexts of discovery and of
    confirmation

11
The Naturalistic Epistemology of Objectivity, II
Characterizing Appropriateness for
Cognitive/Conceptual Structures
  • How do background theories _at_ (C, t ) inform
    projectibility judgments?
  • Simple answer Theories explicitly accepted _at_
    (C, t) provide reasons to identify some
    alternatives as plausible others as implausible.
  • Naturalistic answer Indirectly _at_ (C, t)
    explicit theories interact with, inform, and are
    informed by, tacit commitments, conceptual
    structures, trained intuitions, etc. All these
    determine judgments of relative plausibility.
  • Whats the relevant analogue to approximate truth
    for tacit commitments, conceptual structures,
    trained intuitions, etc.?
  • Accommodation thesis The relevant analogue is
    accommodation of conceptual, linguistic and
    methodological practices to causal structures.
  • Natural kinds provide an example of accommodation.

12
An Accommodationist Theory of Reference and
Natural Kinds
  • Key idea (Locke, Goodman, Quine, Putnam, )
    Successful inductive/explanatory practice
    requires accommodation between linguistic,
    conceptual, taxonomic resources and relevant
    causal factors.
  • Referential hypotheses Hypotheses about how
    language-world relations contribute to
    accommodation in particular disciplinary
    matrices.
  • Natural kinds are social/linguistic artifacts
  • The kind natural kind is itself a natural kind in
    the theory of how accommodation is achieved.

13
Reference
  • For terms ti in a matrix M and families, Fi , of
    properties
  • t1 ? F1
  • .
  • ti ? Fi
  • .
  • tn ? Fn
  • Satisfying Epistemic Access and Accommodation
    Conditions

14
Epistemic Access and Accommodation
  • Epistemic access condition There is a systematic
    causally sustained tendency for what is
    predicated of ti within M to be approximately
    true of things which satisfy Fi, i1,..,n.
  • Accommodation condition This fact, and the
    causal powers of things possessing F1,..,Fn,
    explain how the use of t1,..,tn in M contributes
    to whatever tendency there is for the
    accommodation demands of M to be satisfied
  • Remark Accommodation sometimes requires that
    Fis be homeostatic property clusters.

15
Metaphysical Lesson The Reality of Kinds
  • Dont ask Is X a natural kind?
  • Ask instead To what extent/how does the
    deployment of X contribute to accommodation in
    discipline D?
  • Realism?
  • Kinds are social constructions
  • Theyre real if we are and if they correspond
    to relevant causal structures
  • Mind independence?
  • Beaver dams are social constructions but
    theyre real
  • Real issue Do minds/social practices make
    causal reality?
  • Realist answer (2N2C) Human social practices
    make no non-causal contribution to causal
    structures. No one here but us animals!

16
Kinds, Modality and Modal Intuitions
  • Received view (term t refers to K in actual
    world, w w other possible world)
  • Actual world uses of t refer in w to K
  • Ks definition in w is the same as its
    definition in w
  • Intuitions reliable guide to Ks definition,
    modal properties
  • Problems
  • For HPC K definition is a clustering an
    actual causal process
  • Its historically and situationally
    individuated ?members of the cluster vary? Same
    variation across possible worlds
  • Trans-world individuation context dependent,
    depends on trans-world individuation of
    disciplines ? individuation often ambiguous
    often breaks down altogether for (even modestly)
    distant possible worlds
  • BUT, intuitions deliver determinate (hence
    false) judgments
  • Philosophically interesting phenomena are HPC
    knowledge, rationality, reference, justification,
    goodness, representation, mentality, personhood,

17
Appropriateness for Cognitive/Conceptual
Structures Truth and Reliability as Special
Cases of Accommodation.
  • Approximate truth special case of accommodation
  • ly governed by Tarski-style compositional
    semantics
  • via accommodation accomplished through use of
    natural kind terms
  • Reliability of particular methods reliability
    with respect to approximate truth
  • Representational function of projectibility
    judgments, intuitions, research styles, hunches,
    etc.
  • causal contributions (/-) to reliability of
    practices via alignment with causal structures,
    where
  • /- contributions are determined by overall
    inferential/practical architecture (cf. natural
    kinds)
  • Representational function ( computational role)
    may be distributed not localized (e.g.,
    projectibility judgments distributed over
    colleagues, referees)
  • Needed A better representational theory of
    insight.

18
The Naturalistic Epistemology of Objectivity,
III Sources of Background Theories, Concepts,
  • Which theories, doctrines, etc. determine
    projectibility judgments _at_ (C, t)?
  • Simple answer The most fundamental findings in
    C at t.
  • Naturalistic Answer Complicated story
    involving two important factors.
  • Plurality of sources
  • Disciplinary diversity
  • Borrowed expertise (auxiliary hypotheses,
    instrumentation,)
  • Unrefereed common knowledge (or error)
  • Each of these ? limited individual critical
    expertise
  • Social certification of expertise
  • By universities, journals, academies, etc
  • Relative prestige of research institutions,
    groups
  • Each factor socially orchestrated ? No viable
    internal/external distinction

19
Naturalistic Epistemology, III, contd
Objectivity and Social Embedding
  • When are scientific methods objective?
  • Simplistic (but common answer) When
    presupposition free
  • Simple naturalistic answer When background
    theories, methods, etc are ly true, reliable,
  • More sophisticated naturalistic answer Depends
    also on the political economy of science _at_ (C, t)
  • When are scientists confident about a finding?
  • 1. Published in major journal
  • 2. From respected author or research group
  • 3. Results relatively unsurprising
  • When do scientists subject a finding to special
    scrutiny?
  • Failure of one or more of above.
  • When are such practices reliable?
  • When 1-3 reliably indicate approximate truth
  • When not? Social ideology in science.
  • E.g., literature on race, intelligence, IQ
  • When corrected?
  • Science and external political struggles.

20
The Naturalistic Epistemology of Objectivity, IV
Conceptual Analysis and Critiques of Scientific
Judgment
  • How to understand, criticize the
    conceptual/inferential structures of science?
  • Simple (logical empiricist) answer Formally
    rationally reconstruct concepts scientists
    actually use.
  • Simple naturalistic answer Analyze the
    concepts scientists actually use as
    approximations to real definitions (cf. causal
    descriptive theories of reference)
  • More complicated naturalistic answer
    Acknowledge malignant conceptual meanings
    massively mistaken concepts central to scientific
    communication practice.
  • Conceptual meaning of term q at (C, t)
    cognitive/inferential commitments regarding q
    with which one must engage in order to understand
    literature, practice.
  • Two sorts of engagement
  • Uncritical Acceptance. Think ordinary
    sophisticated practitioner
  • Critical Special stance for historian or
    philosopher of science

21
Malignant Conceptual Meanings Human Sociobiology
  • PREMISE Early human behaviors of kind B had
    evolutionary function F.
  • CONCLUSION The underlying, innate and relatively
    nonmalleable (perhaps unconscious) motive of
    contemporary behaviors of kind B is ly to
    accomplish F.
  • Such inferential patterns define the human
    sociobiological literature, are presupposed in
    the writing/reading of articles.
  • Their inappropriateness follows from principles
    all their authors acknowledge.
  • Daly, M. and M. Wilson. 1997. "Child Abuse and
    Other Risks of not Living with Both Parents," in
    L. Betzig ed. 1997. Human Nature A Critical
    Reader. New York Oxford University Press
  • PREMISE In early humans evolutionary function
    of child rearing was to enhance survival of
    own/relatives children
  • CONCLUSION we should expect parental feeling
    to vary as a function of the prospective fitness
    value of the child in question to the parent.
    NB In contemporary societies.
  • Malignant meanings!

22
Metaphilosophical Conclusion Nonreductionist
Philosophical Naturalism
  • Quine Philosophy is empirical and continuous
    with the empirical sciences
  • Simple (REDUCTIONIST) reading metaphysics
    physics epistemology individual perceptual,
    cognitive psychology
  • Correct (NONREDUCTIONIST!) reading Philosophy
    continuous with empirical sciences including
    social, cognitive and linguistic architecture and
    political economy of science.
  • No distinctly philosophical methods
  • Philosophical/linguistic/modal intuitions
    trained judgments ? sources of a priori knowledge
  • FINAL CONCLUSION ALL THIS ? PHILOSOPHY IS NOT
    JUST CONTINUOUS WITH, BUT AN ESSENTIAL COMPONENT
    OF, SOUND SCIENTIFIC PRACTICE.

23
Postscript Clarifying Foundationalism (An
Approximation)
  • Let F some set of foundational beliefs.
  • MF methods justifiable either a priori or by
    reference to members of F
  • Foundationalism in domain D with respect to F
    Whenever p (in D) is known its justifiable
    ultimately from premises in F using methods in
    MF.
  • Foundationalism is more or less radical/modest
    depending on choice of F
  • Modest foundationalism Take F q q is a
    priori or q is (true and) commonsensical and
    could be doubted only as a philosophical
    exercise
  • NOTE Modest foundationalism for D Research
    in D is (pre-D) common sense iterated.
  • Theory-dependence of scientific methods ? For
    scientific D, no version of even modest
    foundationalism is true. Science is not
    pre-scientific common sense iterated!
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