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metaphysics

Can metaphysicians discover new existing things?

September 17, 2018 by The Philosurfer Leave a Comment

The Problem
Metaphysics studies reality at the most fundamental level, whereas science explores reality only in specific ways. For example, physics studies things insofar as they move, biology studies things insofar as they are alive, and chemistry studies things insofar as they are composed of microscopic parts; but metaphysics studies things insofar as they are real. It seems like metaphysics should hold a place of eminence amongst these studies, yet science is constantly discovering new and interesting entities (= existing things), whereas metaphysics isn’t. How can metaphysics claim a place of eminence when it can’t produce results like science? And, can metaphysics discover anything that exists?

Here’s an argument that shows this difficulty for metaphysics:
A1: discovery of new entities
1. Some disciplines discover new and strange things that exist
2. This is a very important achievement that shows their worth
3. Metaphysics doesn’t discover any new existing things
4. So, metaphysics does not have the same worth

Response
An obvious response is that this argument has an undistributed middle. Discovery of new entities may show a discipline is important, but this doesn’t mean it is the only arbiter of worth. For example, metaphysics has something to say about the way these entities exist. While it was the achievement of science to discover quanta and their strange behavior, it falls to metaphysics to determine which amongst several options are true about them. Is the world just a collection of quanta? Are macro-level objects just as real as the quanta that make them up? Is it the case that quanta exist only virtually once they are part of a larger thing? Getting the right answer here can’t be a matter of empirical investigation because there is no possible discernible difference between these three options. Instead, it is a matter of the rigorous reasoning of metaphysics.

We still might wonder at this disparity in discoveries, though. Why is it that metaphysics can’t find anything new? The explanation is two-fold. First, metaphysics deals mostly in necessity: given certain facts about existing things, what must they exist like? However, there are unfathomably-many possibilities of what could exist. The fact that these are possible–but not necessary–objects means that we must use our senses to find out which possibilities are actual. We can’t reason to the existence of contingent things unless we are given some facts that necessitate their existence. So, it makes sense that science, relying on empirical tools that reach the contingent, would discover their existence whereas metaphysics wouldn’t.

Second, metaphysics is mostly interested in things insofar as they exist. This means the results of most metaphysics apply to all real things–or, since things that don’t exist are nothing, we could simplify this to say they apply to all things. While our souls may be very different from our soles, the lessons of metaphysics will often times apply equally to both. Thus, metaphysics will not often be in the business of making distinctions between kinds of real things in the first place, let alone of discovering new distinctions.

However, that isn’t to say it never discovers any new entities. As I said, metaphysics claims that given certain parameters, things must exist like such-and-such. What if we, through some other discipline, find some parameters that necessitate the existence of something new? This would count for the discovery of a new entity by metaphysics. For example, some metaphysicians think that, given the existence of repeatables like properties, kinds, and relations, there must exist some real entity, universals, that explains the repeatability.

Actually, they wouldn’t even have to say the existence of real universals is necessary. They could use abductive logic to show the existence of universals best explains these repeatables. For more on how that’s possible, see here: https://youtu.be/-APA1cJYkwM. Either way, it seems possible that metaphysicians discover at least some entities.

Filed Under: Metametaphysics Tagged With: abductive logic, abductive reasoning, metametaphysics, metaphysics, methodology, ontology, realism

What should we think when philosophy gets weird?

February 28, 2018 by The Philosurfer Leave a Comment

This week we are talking about the Problem of Material Constitution: how can a material object retains its identity through change? To bring the problem into focus, we looked at the Ship of Theseus, a very strange thought experiment. A tempting thought when things get weird is to punt to skepticism. You might think, “This is exactly why I hate philosophers. Why waste your time on pointless questions like this?!” After all, it seems obvious that material things survive change and if philosophy is going to say otherwise then it’s stupid. What can we say about philosophy when it seems to go off the deep end? Here are three ideas.

1. Breaking you down to build you back up

Socrates, one of the progenitors of Western philosophy, was sentenced to death for moral corruption of the youth. I like to believe the following account is why. In a passage in Plato’s Meno, Socrates interrogates Meno into exposing his ignorance about the nature of virtue. This can easily be mistaken for an attack on the existence of virtue itself, but I think Socrates’ purpose is to bring Meno to a better understanding of virtue because he believes such understanding will steel Meno’s resolve to be virtuous in the face of temptation whereas a faulty understanding will cause him to falter. For example, I might resist trying heroin because my parents told me so, but I’ll be much more likely to reject it if I see its effect on others and learn the staggering statistics of misery.

In the same way, when philosophy gets wacky such as in the case of material constitution, we might not have to construe our inquiry as destructive. Imagine the Ship of Theseus paradox actually happens. Someone takes all the replaced planks, rebuilds the ship, and posts it on eBay. Had you already bought the continuous ship, seeing the eBay advertisement might shake your faith in the existence of material objects. Wouldn’t it be nice to have a theory as to how material objects can retain their identity through time? Maybe that’s all we’re after when we talk about the Problem of Material Constitution.

2. Philosophy takes time

One of my favorite quotes about philosophy comes from Harm J.M.J. Gorris. When evaluating a philosophical theory that would have us reject a common-sense view of the world, Gorris says, “I think philosophy must first do its homework and present an airtight, non-circular argument before it may dismiss such an intuitive insight as mere illusion.” That stuck with me because it resolved an issue that had been haunting me. When he converted to theism, then-renowned atheist A.J. Ayer  gave the rationale that we must, “Follow the evidence, wherever it leads.” What bothered me about that quote was that throughout history people have thought up new arguments for and against God. What if the evidence changes just a little tomorrow so that it slightly favors the opposite? For me, faith is life-changing. Am I to change my life with the academic wind?

Gorris’ quote is important to me because it reminds me that we don’t need to throw out our beliefs just because some new, wacky doctrine comes along. Philosophy actually takes a long, long time to advance, and what is philosophically fashionable today needs some time under its belt before it can be established. Philosophers are working daily to show why philosophical theories are untenable. It could easily be the case that the new, cutting-edge theory of today is the cautionary tale of tomorrow. Maybe when philosophy gets weird, we should just wait.

3. The world is weird

In college, a friend of mine ran into a tree so hard that his legs and arms literally shot out like on a cartoon. It was one of the greatest moments of my life and I still cherish the memory. However, if we are being scientifically accurate, he never did run into the tree. Our best science has led us to conclude all physical objects are actually made up of much smaller particles that never truly touch each other. Both my friend and the tree are made up of a tiny fraction of a percentage of stuff, and the rest is empty space. Instead of hitting the tree, the electrons in my friend were unable to fill the correct role in the atoms of the tree and vice versa due to some bizarre atomic property. When we look at my friend and the tree, however, it certainly doesn’t look that way. It looks like both are totally solid, filled-in objects that smack into each other. In other words, the world is a lot weirder than it initially looks.

Philosophy makes strange claims at times. Sometimes it is only for the sake of better understanding of common sense, sometimes it’s just because philosophy hasn’t had enough time to work things out, but it might be just because the world is weird. If science has established that the world is totally different than it appears, then maybe we should expect the same of philosophy. It would be odd to say that the world isn’t as intuitive as it seems after we’ve done science, but then we do philosophy and it’s totally what we anticipated. Maybe weird is just what we should expect.

Filed Under: Metaphilosophy Tagged With: academic, college, high school, metaphilosophy, metaphysics, ontology, philosophy, philosophy of science, philosurfer, university