Ryle at Ryerson

This weekend I’m going to be at the “Ryle at Ryerson”:http://www.philosophy.ryerson.ca/ryleatryerson/ conference. It looks like it should be a lot of fun, so any readers who are anywhere near Toronto are encouraged to come along.

When I finish applying sufficient polish to the paper I’m presenting (hopefully later today!) I’ll post it. It will be related to my paper on “epistemic deontology”:http://brian.weatherson.org/ddd.pdf, but with more emphasis on the moral psychology, and *much* more emphasis on Ryle.

The Dancing Cockatoo

Nico Silins sent along this wonderful link to “Snowball the dancing cockatoo”:http://birdloversonly.blogspot.com/2007/09/may-i-have-this-dance.html. I wish I could dance that well! I’d wish I had a cockatoo that could dance that well, but I don’t think that I’d wish a cockatoo an existence this far north of the equator…

A Conference at Rutgers

On October 26, 27 and 28 there will be a conference at Rutgers (New Brunswick) on metaphysics and physics. The focii of the conference are questions concerning how physics and metaphysics have, do, and ought to inform each other. The speakers are Alan Code, Dean Zimmerman, Cian Dorr, Tim Maudlin, Yuri Balashov and David Albert. If you’re interested in attending, contact the conference organiser Heather Demerast (heatheremerast aht googlemail dawt com).

I’ll be commenting on Dean’s paper. It looks like it should be a fun conference, although some of us may be attending with one eye on the baseball/the nearest iPhone.

The Evil Demon Argument

I’m reading Janet Broughton’s “Descartes’ Method of Doubt”:http://www.amazon.com/Descartess-Method-Doubt-Janet-Broughton/dp/0691117322/ref=sr_1_1/103-1770179-9198265?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191874746&sr=8-1, and I was struck by how different Descartes seemed to me than he seems to mainstream Descartes interpreters. I’m assuming here that what Broughton takes for granted is generally accepted throughout contemporary Descartes scholarship, which seems like a decent principle.

The big difference is how much weight to give to the discussion of past failures at the start of Meditation One. Here is the Cottingham translation of the relevant passage.

bq. Whatever I have up till now accepted as most true I have accepted either from the senses or through the senses. But from time to time I have found that the senses deceive, and it is prudent never to trust completely those who have deceived us even once.

I think Descartes is making, or at least proposing, the following argument.

# We cannot gain knowledge from any method that has deceived us once in the past.
# All our methods for forming beliefs have deceived us (at least) once in the past.
# So we have no knowledge.

I don’t think this argument is entirely contained in that paragraph. Perhaps some of the discussion of dreams is supposed to back up premise 1. But I do think the argument is entirely finished by the time the evil demon comes into the picture. As of course it must be, since we haven’t (as far as we know) been deceived by evil demons in the past, and this argument turns on errors we know we’ve made.

I have three opinions about the role of this argument in the _Meditations_, which I’ll state in increasing order of absurdity (or at least heterodoxy).

# The argument here is independent of the evil demon argument, so the evil demon argument is not the only sceptical argument Descartes makes.
# This argument, the argument from past failure, is the sceptical argument with which Descartes is primarily concerned.
# Descartes does not make what is commonly construed as The Evil Demon Argument. The evil demon enters the story not so Descartes can state a sceptical argument, but so we (and he) can appreciate the consequences of the sceptical argument that he has already made, namely the argument from prior error.

Perhaps the first of these points is widely held; I should finish the Broughton (and perhaps read other things) before commenting more. But I’m pretty sure 2 and 3 are not commonplace views. Still, I think they can make sense of several puzzling features of the text.

One of these puzzles, which Broughton mentions, is that Descartes never clearly expresses what is wrong with the Evil Demon argument. This would be odd if it was his key argument. But note that he does say what is wrong with the argument from past failure. Indeed, a centrepiece of the book is the argument that premise 2 of that argument fails, because the method _Believe what you clearly and distinctly perceive_ has never led to failure.

I’ll say more about this when I finish Broughton’s book, but I thought I’d start by posting my quirky views, leaving the real arguments for them for later.

In Your Right Mind?

Just for fun: take a look at this moving image.  Don’t read the accompanying text straight away – first decide whether you think the figure is spinning clockwise or anti-clockwise.  (Apparently this will tell you something interesting about your brain use, though I think the illusion is interesting enough regardless of the reliability of this claim.)  At first I could only see it spinning clockwise; now I can only see it spinning anti-clockwise.  Apparently some people can change what they see at will, but not me.

HT: Talkin’ ‘Bout Stuff

Update: I have now been able to change at will a couple of times, by focussing on one of the hands and thinking about when it would have to be in front and when behind if the figure were spinning in the opposite direction!

Geelong and Princeton

I have been “rather”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2003_NCAA_Men%27s_Division_I_Basketball_Tournament “absurdly”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl_XXXIX “lucky”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_World_Series “with”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_UEFA_Champions_League_Final “sporting”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006-07_Ashes “results”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Cricket_World_Cup” recently. But despite all this good fortune, I was still hoping for one more good result. That was the first ever sporting team I seriously followed, the Geelong football club, to win a Premiership. And, as many of you will know by now, on Saturday they did. I got to see most of the game, over a rather dodgy internet connection, but it was pretty good to see the game even in lo-res.

I never really expected Geelong would win after all their disasters of the recent past. What I absolutely wouldn’t have expected was to see them win, host a small party in the US for some local Australians watching the game, and have the story of the party written up back in the Geelong paper. That didn’t happen to me, but it did happen to “Mark Johnston”:http://www.geelongadvertiser.com.au/article/2007/10/01/7434_news.html. It turns out that several of the best and brightest philosophers are Geelong fans. (As they should be, being so attached to the true and the good.) Anyway, well done Mark on what seems to have been as successful a footy-watching party as can be imagined!

Thanks to Michael Smith for the link.

PS: I’m aware that I have too many pro-attitudes towards sporting teams. I’m trying to cut back. So we won’t have obsessive posts here about the Rugby World Cup, for instance. About the baseball playoffs, we make no promises…

Eidos ‘Because’ Conference

The Eidos Centre for Metaphysics in Geneva has put out a call for papers for its upcoming ‘Because’ conference.  Unfortunately their web site seems to be down at the moment so I will reproduce the details here.

The use of explanatory concepts, as expressed by means of locutions like ‘because’ or ‘in virtue of’, pervades all philosophical disciplines.  In many cases what is at stake are causal links, but in many other cases causation is not involved. A currently hotly debated example is provided by the topic of truth-making. A truth-maker is something which makes a truth-bearer (a sentence, or a proposition, etc.) true, and the truth-making relation is commonly spelt out in terms of a non-causal explanatory relationship: for a truth-bearer to be made true by an entity is for it to be true in virtue of that entity, or in virtue of the existence of that entity. Other examples can be found in discussions about ontological dependence, supervenience, substances, essence, reduction, the realism vs. anti-realism debate, or again knowledge. The papers presented at the conference will deal with topics where non-causal explanatory links are crucially involved, as used in order to treat certain philosophical issues, or as the proper topic of philosophical inquiry.

The conference will take place in Geneva, Switzerland, on 15-17 February 2008.

The submission deadline is *December 1st, 2007*.  Participants will be notified by December 15th.  Email abstracts of approx. 1000 words to Fabrice Correira or Benjamin Schnieder.

Travel and accommodation will be paid for speakers, and it is expected that a selection of conference papers will be published in a subsequent edited volume.  The invited speakers are Kit Fine (NYU), E. J. Lowe (Durham), Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra (Oxford), Zoltan Szabo (Yale) and me (Nottingham).  It should be a great event, and Geneva is a beautiful city, so get writing on those abstracts!

 Update: The conference website seems to be working now.

More Links

I’m mostly pottering around here trying to figure out how iChat, AIM and Skype all work. (Answer: Not as well as I’d like them to.) In the meantime, here are a few links.

* I agree entirely with what “Rachel McKinney says”:http://atomsarranged.blogspot.com/2007/09/women-in-philosophy-women-in.html. Knowing something about the stages by which a high school class in which white males are a small minority into a philosophy profession where they are an overwhelming majority is pretty important to doing something about fixing the situation.

bq. Successful navigation through a series of decisions (say, the decision to graduate from high-school, the decision to pursue study at a postsecondary institution, the decision to take a course on critical thinking, the decision to take intro-level survey courses in philosophy, the decision to take upper-level courses in philosophy, the decision to major in philosophy, the decision to pursue philosophy at the graduate level, admittance to a graduate program, successful advancement through a graduate program, matriculation from a graduate program, entrance into the job market, progress through a tenure-track position, etc) culminates in a student’s entry into a particular area of professional study. By empirically measuring participation rates at various levels of study, we can find out when participation by members of certain groups “drops off” (i.e., after intro-level courses but before the choice to major in a particular area, or after admission into a graduate program but before finishing coursework, etc). This information can help us pinpoint the level of educational study at which members of underrepresented groups find themselves alienated or disengaged.

* This is an interesting report on the first meeting of “The Collegium of Black Women Philosophers”:http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=rVDdSShyYzsDdqdVtrhbFS234msgNfm3. The high estimate on the number of black women philosophers in America is *29*, out of an APA membership of 10,000.
* It’s less directly connected to philosophy, but this is a pretty interesting story on the “Little Rock Nine”:http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2007/09/littlerock200709, and especially Elizabeth Eckford.
* On a lighter note, Blackwell is “having a book launch party at the APA”:http://www.kaleidotech.com/epicurean/books.html.

Quick Links

I’m mostly just worrying about (a) the Grand Final and (b) the pile of editing on my desk. But here are some other quick points.

* The Sage School has “a new website”:http://www.arts.cornell.edu/phil/. It would have had one earlier if I didn’t insist on trying (and failing) to build one in house. But the site looks pretty good I think.
* As part of that site, there is “an announcement of an open position”:http://www.arts.cornell.edu/phil/announcements/searches/. It’s basically to replace me, but since I was there as a generalist, it really is a quite open search. (Or at least so I gather, I don’t have any special leads on this since I’m not playing that central a role in the search.)
* I’m getting rather excited about all the “Australian bars and restaurants in NYC”:http://www.theage.com.au/news/in-depth/big-apple-embraces-little-australia/2007/09/07/1188783490403.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1. And I’m glad _The Age_ is using the term “Little Australia”; I thought only I was crazy enough to use it. It might be fun to watch footy games at some of those places.
* I’ve been using “Jottit”:http://www.jottit.com quite a bit, and it seems like a really useful site.
* The UConn grad student blog is no more, but some of the former contributors have set up their own blogs, including “Alexis McLeod”:http://www.philosophy.uconn.edu/grad/mcleod.htm, “Colin Caret”:http://www.philosophy.uconn.edu/grad/caret.htm and “Aaron Cotnoir”:http://cotnoir.wordpress.com/, who has “an interesting post up on paraconsistent modal logic”:http://cotnoir.wordpress.com/2007/09/19/contingency-in-lp/.