Brain Damage

crazy-jerrys.jpg

For us Chili heads or connoisseurs if you wish there are many sauces out there with novelty packaging designed to appeal to our habit. Unfortunately, however amusing as some of the marketing may be, most of these sauces tend to be very disappointing. Either they are too bland and watery – or they lack any subtly whatsoever. The sauce I’m plugging here (Crazy Jerry’s) is rather good – and so I recommend it to the incredibly narrow market of chili-heads/cognitive scientists: the brain motif certainly attracted me.

CogSci 2008

30th ANNUAL MEETING OF THE COGNITIVE SCIENCE SOCIETY
July 23-26, 2008
Washington DC
 

The Cognitive Science Society wishes it to be known that the deadline for Member Abstract submissions for CogSci 2008 is February 1, the same as all other submission categories. Unlike past practice there will not be an April/May submission opportunity this year. Also note that authors of full papers that are not accepted for oral or poster presentation will have the option of converting the abstract from their paper into a Member Abstract submission. To facilitate this and standardize their appearance, all Member Abstracts are now limited to 150 words.

Please click here for all other information about CogSci 2008

Inference to the best explanation

With the passing of Peter Lipton, who formulated and coined the term “inference to the best explanation“(IBE) I was reminded that I once “controversially” (at least to some, though not philosophers of history) deployed the term in a paper to do with the philosophy of history. When I spoke to Peter about it, he couldn’t see any objection to my usage. I restate the relevant excerpt here. (The dry-wall analogy which I refer to is explicated here).

If we consider how Oakeshott conceives, in his famous phrase, ‘the activity of being an historian’, we see a non-coherentist account of justification and truth at work. To avoid the problems of coherentism let’s try a different interpretation albeit a somewhat controversial one: the anticipated objections will be considered later. C. Behan McCullagh (The Truth of History, London and New York: Routledge, 1998, p. 46) outlines what he terms the “correlation” theory of justification and truth. In it I find nothing with which Oakeshott would disagree. Now here is the controversial aspect: I take it to be a form of inference to the best explanation (IBE).

IBE holds that we have sufficient reason (i.e. justification) for accepting that hypothesis which, if true, would best explain x, where ‘x’ is some available evidence that presents a problem of intelligibility. Its logical form is:

X (evidence to be explained)Y (hypothesis which, if true, would best explain X)

————————————————–

Therefore Y

Note that IBE is a form of non-deductive inference; the premises probabilify and do not necessitate the conclusion. We accept Y because it is the best explanation of X available to us; it may still be false.

Now, of course, a whole set of questions immediately presents itself as to what constitutes the ‘best explanation’. The matter cannot be fully discussed here; elucidation can be found in Peter Lipton’s standard text (Inference to the Best Explanation. London and New York, Routledge,1991).

We infer to the best explanation regularly in science, history, and practice. It is formally elusive, indeterminate in its technical expression, but easily recognisable in specific examples. Jack has never liked Jill but suddenly becomes affable towards her. Jill starts to receive invitations to Jack’s parties; Joan also sends Jill the occasional solicitous email; Jack asks Jill her opinion on a range of matters and listens carefully to her views. How best to explain this turn of events? We discover that Jill is standing for election to a committee which is likely to be divided on her candidature and on which Jill is likely to have a casting vote. So we infer that Jack has become affable towards Jill in order to secure her vote. From our knowledge of all concerned, this is the best explanation. It may be wrong; perhaps Jack has undergone a moral conversion. But we have no evidence, outside this episode, of any such conversion. If further evidence becomes available, the best explanation may change.

So far as I can make out, this is very much Oakeshott’s approach to the nature of both historical and scientific explanation. It is hard to see how else, in science, he could explain why:

The image of a stationary earth is replaced by that of a stationary sun, iron dissolves into an arrangement of electrons and protons, water is revealed to be a combination of gases and the concept of undulations in the air of various dimensions takes the place of the images of sounds (Rationalism in politics, pp.504-505).

These images changed because they provided or supported, according to the evidence available, the best explanation of a range of problems. And the image of the dry-wall, invoked in his later accounts of historical explanation , is exactly apt for IBE. We infer the hypothesis that would, if true, provide the best explanation of the available evidence. We build the wall (infer the historical hypothesis) that best fits the stones together (explains the available evidence). (Oakeshott’s “dry-wall” analogy has some resonance with Haack’s crossword analogy of scientific justification – her so-called Foundherentism which allows the relevance of experience to empirical justification without postulating any privileged class of basic beliefs or requiring that relations of support be essentially one directional).

Two objections may be expected to this account of Oakeshott. The first is that it commits the fallacy of supposing that, because IBE fits well with (much of) what Oakeshott says, that therefore he accepts the model of IBE. The reply to this is that we know that Oakeshott cannot be a correspondence theorist about justification, at least with respect to historical explanation, because our historical explanations cannot correspond to an inexistent past. If Oakeshott does not subscribe to IBE, then it would be interesting to know what presents itself as a probable alternative, if correspondence is certainly out of the question and coherence were not in play.

Even if Oakeshott were an IBE theorist, relativism returns to haunt him. This is because such inference is indexed to a given subject – an individual mind or a collectivity of minds – at a given time. A dilemma arises for IBE. If it allows for ethical, political, and social justification, then:

(a) it must affirm the empirical and conceptual possibility that different minds or collectivities of minds – or let us say ‘different persons’, which is a more natural phrase here – may justifiably accept ethical, political, and social beliefs and activities which, when universalised, are inconsistent. That is the logic of the IBE model. Or,(b) it must exclude the idea of ethical, political, and social justification. This would certainly avoid relativism in these areas.

On a clarificatory point: in the cases of IBE justification considered above, we focused on justification in believing that X (believing that something is the case), which may yield knowledge that X. It is clear that, on Oakeshott’s account, justification will operate differently in ethical, political, and social action as involving justification in decision-making or practical reasoning, in deciding how to act, as well as justification in what to believe. This is why the dilemma refers to ‘beliefs and activities’. In the background is Ryle’s epistemological distinction by which it is widely agreed that Oakeshott was influenced. But the question of justifying practical reasoning still applies.  

From “Constructivism and Relativism in Oakeshott” in The Intellectual Legacy of Michael Oakeshott

Historical explanation: “dry wall” analogy

This posting refers to this posting.

 Excerpt from my Polybius essay.

Oakeshott (1983: 94) characteristically offers a brilliant analysis of the problem which he calls the ‘dry wall theory’. Keeping in mind Pedach’s and Walbank’s account of historical development, Oakeshott believes that though historical events are not themselves contingent, they are related to one another contingently. When a historian assembles a passage of antecedent events to compose a subsequent, he builds what in the countryside is called a ‘dry wall’:

the stones (that is, the antecedent events) which compose the wall (that is, the subsequent event) are joined and held together, not by mortar, but in terms of their shapes. The wall therefore has no premeditated design; it is what its components, in touching constitute. There is a circumstantial relationship, an evidential contiguity, not in terms of causality, family resemblance, design etc. These circumstantial relationships do not themselves constitute historically significant relationships.

So when a historian employs the language of causality, what he ought to be referring to is this contingent circumstantial relationship. A historical past, composed conceptually of contiguous historical events has no place for extrinsic general terms of relationship – the glue of normality or the cement of general causes’ – neither Polybius’ tyche, Pedach’s intentionality, Walbank’s interpretation of aitiai, nor a Hempelian deductive-nomological conditions are valid analyses for historical explanation. And further, Chance as an exemplar of the purely external, cannot be a genuinely causal relationship and is therefore insignificant. To reiterate: Oakeshott (1983: 83) writes that ‘when a historian invokes a notion of ‘causality’ what he is in fact doing is utilizing a rhetorical expression meaning no more than ‘noteworthy antecedents’ and no ‘law(s)’ are involved . . .

Oakeshott, M. (1983). On history and other essays. Indianapolis: Liberty Press. 

Conspiracy Theories: Special Issue

Volume 4, issue 2, a special issue of EPISTEME is now available.
Guest Editor: David Coady
Contents and Abstracts available here.

 

Social Neuroscience review

Review by Roy Sugarman of Social Neuroscience: Integrating Biological and Psychological Explanations of Social Behavior.

Two American Scientist Reviews

The Functionalist’s Dilemma
George Lakoff reviews Ray Jackendorf’s Language, Consciousness, Culture: Essays on Mental Structure.

Constructing Cognition
Ethan Remmel reviews Katherine Nelson’s Young Minds in Social Worlds: Experience, Meaning, and Memory.

Honderich vs McGinn II

Judging from the discussion on Leiter Reports the merits of McGinn’s review is sub judice. To be fair, there is a great deal of pap out there not all coming to the attention of first order minds like McGinn. In a footnote to the review, McGinn writes:

The review that appears here is not as I originally wrote it. The editors asked me to “soften the tone” of the original; I have done so, though against my better judgment.

As I see it the issue divides up into two groups:

Group A:

1. Ignoring a poor book is the best fate to befall it;

2. A review acts as a public service: reader be forewarned!

Group B:

1. Bland undiscriminating reviews are just space fillers; 

2. Surely much of the blame for a poor book must be laid at the publisher’s doorstep: just because one has a “name” does not ensure quality.

I haven’t read Honderich’s book: in any event this wouldn’t be the first turkey he has produced. His The Real Meaning of Conservatism, taking a swipe at Roger Scruton’s influential though itself middling The Meaning of Conservatism, was dreadful. I’m inclined to A1: I do not review books that are, at best unengaging or, at worst, just downright wrong (and I don’t mean to suggest that I don’t appreciate well-argued views that run contrary to my own – indeed, that’s where the value lies). Reviewing poor books is too much like hard work.

For those who haven’t actually read the review, here are some choice extracts, occasionally reminding me of that master of the put-down, A.E. Housman.

This book runs the full gamut from the mediocre to the ludicrous to the merely bad. It is painful to read, poorly thought out, and uninformed. It is also radically inconsistent. The structure of the book consists of a series of previously published papers, somewhat modified, with short introductory sections, going back to 1981.

Throughout, the book is woefully uninformed about the work of others and at best amateurish. Honderich’s understanding of positions he criticizes is often weak to nonexistent, though not lacking in chutzpah. And the view he ends up defending is preposterous in the extreme and easily refuted.

After a banal and pointless chapter on seeing and sense-data (even the author refers to it as “this faltering paper” [123]), we finally reach the crux and, presumably, the excuse for the book.

Is there anything of merit in On Consciousness? Honderich does occasionally show glimmers of understanding that the problem of consciousness is difficult and that most of our ideas about it fall short of the mark. His instincts, at least, are not always wrong. It is a pity that his own efforts here are so shoddy, inept, and disastrous (to use a term he is fond of applying to the views of others).

Philosophical Review, Vol. 116, No. 3, 2007