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What then motivates us to become authentic is the experience of Angst, which Heidegger interprets as an awareness of the precariousness of a life whose goals and values are not understoo

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involvements So although these practical undertakings

manifest an existential concern with the world, Heidegger

argues that they do not arise from the will if that is

conceived in terms of the self-conscious adoption of a

project Thus Heidegger’s account of the existential

structure of human life is basically worked out at an

un-self-conscious level, which is also fundamental to the

con-ception of the ‘lived world’ implied by his existential

pragmatism

Heidegger does not of course deny that there is a level

of self-conscious deliberation and decision, and it is in the

context of this feature of human life that he employs his

distinction between ‘inauthenticity’ and ‘authenticity’

Heidegger’s discussion here looks back to Kierkegaard’s

thesis that it is an achievement to become an individual,

and he deliberately invokes religious terminology to

describe his position, though without Kierkegaard’s

explicit invocation of religious faith The basic idea is that

those whose understanding of themselves is not informed

by a grasp of the true nature of their individual existence,

who think of themselves, say, as just complicated animals,

are said to have only an inauthentic existence; whereas

those who have internalized the truth of Heidegger’s

con-ception of their existence and are able to conduct their

lives in accordance with it are said to have attained

authenticity According to Heidegger, we always start out

with an inauthentic conception of ourselves, since our

pre-reflective involvements with the world and others

lead us to think of ourselves as not significantly different

from them What then motivates us to become authentic

is the experience of Angst, which Heidegger interprets as

an awareness of the precariousness of a life whose goals

and values are not understood as arising from the

struc-ture of one’s own existence Angst, therefore, recalls us to

ourselves, and by making the existential structure of our

life available to us, helps to bring us to an authentic

recognition of our freedom Heidegger connects this

experience of Angst with one’s attitude to one’s own

death: this attitude is typically one of Angst, and because a

correct understanding of death as the end of one’s

exist-ence reveals to us the structure of our own existexist-ence,

an authentic life is ‘an impassioned freedom towards

death’

Heidegger’s existentialism is essentially metaphysical

He even denies that the authentic-inauthentic distinction

has any ethical content, although his actual language

betrays him here Sartre, by contrast, explicitly presents

existentialism as an ethical doctrine He largely takes his

existentialist starting-point from Heidegger, except that

where Heidegger clearly separates human existence from

the exercise of choice, Sartre reformulates the position as

one in which the role of choice in human life is absolutely

fundamental He argues that we choose our emotions as

much as any other aspect of our life, and that the basic

goals of our lives cohere around a fundamental project

which is itself the product of an ‘original choice’—a choice

which, since it provides us with all the motivations we

have, must itself be unmotivated, or *‘absurd’

This unattractive line of thought goes back to Kant In Kant’s case the implied threat of ethical nihilism is sup-posed to be averted by the requirements of the categorical imperative Sartre’s ethical theory is basically similar: although he celebrates the ‘absurdity’ of existentialist free-dom, he actually only commends those exercises of this freedom which manifest respect for the freedom of others

It is not clear what basis Sartre’s existentialism can offer for this value-judgement, but it looks as though he holds both that the existentialist’s values must meet the require-ment that they be the values of someone whose life is, in Heidegger’s sense, authentic, and that authenticity can only be attained within a community which practises mutual respect This leads to the principle Sartre endorses, but it should be noted that the price Sartre has had to pay

in order to provide some social content to his existentialist ethic is an important qualification of the emphasis on the situation of the isolated individual which is so prominent

in Kierkegaard’s writings

Sartre was the last significant existentialist philosopher But existentialism lives on, primarily in attempts to com-bine the basic structure of Heidegger’s metaphysics with other, less theoretical, doctrines: thus we still have ‘exist-ential Marxism’, ‘exist‘exist-ential sociology’, ‘exist‘exist-ential psy-choanalysis’, ‘existential theology’, and so on The general feature of these hybrids is an emphasis on the irreducibil-ity of the perspective of human agents, whose activities, emotions, and thoughts, it is supposed, are to be under-stood in terms of their aspiration to ‘become an individ-ual’, as Kierkegaard would have put it t.r.b

*existence precedes essence

M Heidegger, Being and Time, tr J MacQuarrie and E Robinson

(Oxford, 1962)

S Kierkegaard, Concluding Unscientific Postscript, tr D Swenson

(Princeton, NJ, 1941)

J.-P Sartre, Existentialism and Humanism, tr P Mairet (London,

1948)

T Sprigge, Theories of Existence (London, 1984).

existential proposition An existential proposition (or statement) is one affirming the *existence of some *thing

or kind of things—for instance, ‘The yeti exists’ or ‘Uni-corns exist’ Problems arise over the interpretation of

negative existential statements, especially singular ones

like ‘The yeti does not exist’, because the singular term which functions as the grammatical subject of such a state-ment seems to make reference to an object which, if the statement is true, does not exist e.j.l

W V Quine, ‘On What There Is’, in From a Logical Point of View,

2nd edn (Cambridge, Mass., 1961)

existential quantifier:see quantifier.

exoteric.‘External’ (Greek, exoterikos) A word used by

Aristotle to refer to well-known or published works or arguments of his own, and perhaps of others Later com-mentators distinguished his ‘exoteric’ works, which were easy enough for non-specialists and written in a polished

280 existentialism

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style, from the more difficult works (sometimes called

*esoteric) intended for his own pupils The former were

mainly in dialogue form and survive only in fragments

r.j.h

I Düring, Aristotle in the Ancient Biographical Tradition (Göteborg,

1957), 426–43

experience. Direct, observational knowledge of the

world More narrowly, experience is sometimes restricted

to the sensory basis (*sensation) of this knowledge In the

first sense, one’s experience includes whatever one has

come to know or believe about the world by direct

obser-vation and without inference If you read a book and

watch a movie about baboons, you may learn a lot about

baboons, but such knowledge would not be counted as part

of your experience Your experience would be limited to

books and movies—that a certain book said that baboons

were primates and that a movie depicted them as having

doglike muzzles

In the second, narrower, sense, experience is

distin-guished from belief or knowledge It refers to the sensory

events (e.g visual and auditory sensations) on which beliefs

about the world are typically based In observing an

event—a robbery, say—one’s experience of this event

would be the sensations caused in one by the robbery One

might experience a robbery in this second sense of the term

without ever coming to know or believe that a robbery was

taking place—without, that is, experiencing the robbery as a

robbery Should this occur, one would have robbery

experi-ences (in the narrow sense of this term), but no experience

(i.e knowledge) of robberies in the broader sense

It is this second, narrower, sense of the term that is at

issue in epistemological debates about whether all

know-ledge is ultimately empirical—i.e based on experience

(*Empiricism.) If knowledge is to be based on experience,

as it seems reasonable to think that observational

know-ledge is, one’s beliefs about the world must somehow be

derived from, or justified by, one’s sense experience of the

world It is a problem, however, to understand how it is

possible for experience to lend support to, or justify, the

beliefs it gives rise to If one thinks (as some philosophers

do) of experience as itself belief-like in character, as having

propositional content, a content that can (like the content

of a belief ) be false, then a question can be asked about

what justifies the experience What guarantee (or even

justification) is there that the experience (its content) is

true? If, on the other hand, experience is understood as

non-propositional (as it usually is), as something without

(a possibly false) content, then there is a problem about

how experience can justify the beliefs based on it Beliefs

justify other beliefs by standing in appropriate logical

and explanatory relationships to them, relations that

require the possession of content If experiences are not

themselves belief-like in character, if they have no

propos-itional content, they cannot imply, cannot explain or be

explained by, anything How, then, can they function as

reasons to believe anything? This problem has encouraged

coherence theories of justification to locate justification

(and, hence, knowledge), not in a belief ’s relationship to experience, but in a belief ’s relationships to (its coherence with) the rest of one’s beliefs According to such a view, our experience of the world may be a cause of, but it is not

a justification for, the beliefs we have about the world Other theories of justification (*reliabilism), however, locate justification (for observational beliefs) in the way that beliefs can be made to covary (reliably) with the world by the perceptual systems whose functioning pro-duce such beliefs Such theories, unlike coherence the-ories, give experience both a causal and a justificatory role (as carriers of information) in cognition f.d

*consciousness; perception

L Bonjour, The Structure of Empirical Knowledge (Cambridge,

Mass., 1985)

F Dretske, Knowledge and the Flow of Information (Cambridge,

Mass., 1981), ch 6

A Goldman, Epistemology and Cognition (Cambridge, Mass.,

1986)

experiment. Science aims to understand the world of experience One puts its ideas to the test through experi-ment, where one manipulates phenomena in such a way that answers can be given to specific questions A much-discussed subset of experiments contains those labelled

*‘crucial’, in the sense that they decide authoritatively between rival hypotheses Historians argue that fre-quently, as in the case of Young’s double slit experiment, supposedly deciding between the wave and the particle theories of light, the use of the word ‘crucial’ is a victory roll by the winners after the event

Some experiments are ‘natural’, in the sense that unplanned circumstances simulate what the purposeful experimenter might have attempted In dealing with human subjects or vast scales of time and space, these are often the only possible ways of testing nature Here, as in all experiments, what may have started as an attempt to test ends as a voyage of discovery, as the results suggest new lines of inquiry Charles Darwin used the practices of animal breeders primarily as experimental evidence for his evolutionary speculations, but they proved also to have great heuristic value, even to the point of leading him

to his mechanism of natural selection

Various theorists, from John Stuart Mill with his well-known *methods for distinguishing real from apparent causes to those today who sell computer programs of sta-tistical techniques, have offered prescriptions for the proper performance of experiments However, while there is certainly a craft to be learnt—for instance, in ways

of using controls to avoid reading out prior expectations which one has previously read in—and while today the growth of ‘Big Science’ means that one might have liter-ally hundreds of researchers and an army of technicians working on the same project, ultimately in science the great experimenter is as gifted and unique as the great

*evolution; thought experiment

experiment 281

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I Hacking, Representing and Intervening (Cambridge, 1983).

M Ruse, The Darwinian Revolution (Chicago, 1979).

experiment, crucial: see crucial experiment.

explanation.That which produces understanding how or

why something is as it is In ancient Greek thought a

dis-tinction gradually emerged between explanatory theories

and theories about the nature of explanation Thus

whereas Thales, Empedocles, Anaxagoras, and others

proposed explanations of natural phenomena, Plato’s

the-ory of Forms offered at the same time both a systematic

explanation of things and also a connected epistemology

of explanation Aristotle, however, seems to have been

the first thinker to differentiate explicitly between

investi-gating what causes what and investiinvesti-gating the very nature

of causation On his view the latter investigation revealed

four different kinds of cause that an explanation of

physi-cal phenomena could cite The formal cause is that in

virtue of which a thing is the type of thing that it is; the

material cause is the stuff, whatever it may be, that is

typed by the formal cause; the efficient cause is what

pro-duces a thing; and the final cause is the purpose for which

something is produced

Medieval philosophy mostly echoed Aristotle’s ideas

about explanation Indeed his concept of final causes

sup-plied a convenient foundation for religiously orientated

teleology

It was Francis Bacon who took the decisive step of

seg-regating *teleological explanation from scientific

explan-ation At the same time Bacon treated the form correlated

with an observable characteristic as the law in accordance

with which that characteristic occurs or can be made to

occur, and within the hierarchy of these laws he supposed

that the more comprehensive the explanation that a law

achieves, the more certainty it has

Hume held that such causal laws state merely the

con-stancy with which one particular type of observable

phe-nomenon succeeds another, and argued that the feeling

that this succession occurs necessarily should be explained

as being merely the outcome of a mental association

between the idea of the earlier phenomenon and the idea

of the later one Whether or not Hume is right about this,

the dominant model for explanation in the natural

sci-ences seems to require the citation of one or more laws

which, when conjoined with the statement of relevant

facts, entail occurrences of the phenomenon or

unifor-mity that is to be explained

Russell argued that such laws should specify not a

causal process but the correlation of one natural variable

with one or more others But, wherever we want to derive

a technology from scientific knowledge, we shall need to

know what causes a desired effect So we need to

distin-guish between different levels of explanation, in that

while, for example, the disappearance of a patient’s

infec-tion may be causally explained by his antibiotic injecinfec-tion,

the operation of that causal process is in its turn to be

explained by correlational laws of biochemistry And for

discovering this kind of deeper and more comprehensive explanation it will often be necessary to devise appropri-ate new terminology Moreover, it should also be noted that some scientific explanations cite statistical probabili-ties rather than determinate laws

Further questions arise, especially in the social sciences, about the explanation of specifically human behaviour For example, Hempel held that in historical inquiry the pattern of explanation to be sought accords with the same

*covering-law model that applies in the natural sciences Collingwood argued, however, that the historian achieves understanding of other people’s actions by the reenactment of their thoughts in his own experience And

in any case we cannot overlook the fact that people’s ratio-nal acts need to be explained teleologically—that is, in terms of what their aims are and what they regard as appropriate means But even in those cases what has to do the explaining is temporally prior to, or concurrent with, what has to be explained It is the present thought, not the future satisfaction, of our aims that helps to explain what

we are doing to achieve them: one should not think of teleological explanation as a kind of influence exerted on

*causality

P Achinstein, The Nature of Explanation (Oxford, 1983).

The Philosophy of C G Hempel, ed J Fetzer (New York, 2001) D.-H Ruben (ed.), Explanation (Oxford, 1993).

W C Salmon, Statistical Explanation and Statistical Relevance

(London, 1971)

explanation, historical: see history, problems of the

philosophy of

explanation, inference to the best: see inference to the

best explanation; explanationism

explanation, levels of Any natural phenomenon can be studied in a range of different ways A living organism, for example, can be studied as a collection of particles, as a structure with a complex chemical composition, as a bio-logical entity, and as a member of a social grouping Each of these can be considered a separate level of explanation, where a level of explanation is characterized in terms of a distinctive vocabulary and distinctive explanatory princi-ples (generalizations that may or may not be law-like) The natural question to ask is how different levels of explanation

fit together According to proponents of the *unity of sci-ence, in addition to principles holding at a single level, there are law-like vertical connections between different levels of explanation, so that science forms a hierarchical structure with physics at its base The issue of the relation between different levels of explanation is central to the philosophy of

*mind, where one of the most pressing questions is how our ordinary *folk-psychological understanding of each other is related to subpersonal explanations of *cognition in

*reductionism, mental

282 experiment

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D Charles and K Lennon (eds.), Reduction, Explanation, and

Realism (Oxford, 1992).

explanation, teleological: see teleological explanation.

explanatory gap The phrase ‘explanatory gap’ was

intro-duced by Joseph Levine to label the apparent lack of an

intelligible or explanatory relationship between neural

properties of the brain and the phenomenal properties of

experience (e.g what it’s like to feel pain) Scientists

explain the macro-feature of solidity in terms of

micro-properties concerning the lack of free movement of

atoms By contrast, it seems that nothing we could know

about the nature of neural processing, and interaction

with the environment, would explain the nature of

phe-nomenal properties in similar fashion There is no

consen-sus over whether the gap holds merely for phenomenal

properties or more widely for, at least, some intentional

Joseph Levine, Purple Haze (Oxford, 2001).

explanation and stories: see stories and explanation.

explanation by samples: see samples, explanation by.

explanationism. This slightly barbarous term was first

applied by James Cornman to, roughly, the doctrine that

what justifies an ampliative inference—or more generally

the formation of any new belief—is that the doxastic

move increases the explanatory coherence of one’s

over-all set of beliefs In particular, the explanationist holds that

some beliefs are justified by *‘inference to the best

explan-ation’, the inference from a set of data to the available

hypothesis that best explains those data, where ‘best’ is to

be understood in terms of the pragmatic virtues, such as

*simplicity, explanatory power, and fruitfulness

Explan-ationism derives ultimately from Peirce and Dewey, by

way of Quine and Wilfrid Sellars But Harman (in ‘The

Inference to the Best Explanation’, 1965) was the first to

articulate it and defend it against better-entrenched

com-peting epistemologies It has since received support from

Paul Thagard and from Lycan ( Judgement and Justification,

1988)

One must distinguish between at least three grades of

explanationism We may call them respectively ‘weak’,

‘sturdy’, and ‘ferocious’ Weak explanationism is the

mod-est claim that explanatory inference can epistemically

jus-tify a conclusion (That claim is disputed by Bas van

Fraassen, by Nancy Cartwright, and by Ian Hacking.)

Sturdy explanationism adds that explanatory inference

can do its justifying intrinsically, i.e without being derived

from some other form of ampliative inference, such as

probability theory, taken as more basic (That claim is

dis-puted by Cornman and by Keith Lehrer.) Ferocious

expla-nationism adds that no other form of ampliative inference

is basic; all are derived from explanatory inference (That

claim is disputed by almost everyone.) Interestingly,

Harman originally defended ferocious explanationism,

ignoring the weak–sturdy–ferocious distinction, by trying

to exhibit various common forms of inductive inference as enthymematic instances of explanatory inference (see also

Lycan, Judgement and Justification, ch 9) Harman’s mature explanationist view of all reasoning is given in his Change

*explanation

G Harman, Change in View (Cambridge, Mass., 1986).

—— ‘The Inference to the Best Explanation’, Philosophical Review

(1965)

P Lipton, Inference to the Best Explanation (London, 1991).

W Lycan, Judgement and Justification (Cambridge, 1988).

—— ‘Explanation and Epistemology’, in Paul Moser (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Epistemology (Oxford, 2002).

exploitation. To exploit someone or something is to make use of him, her, or it for your own ends by playing

on some weakness or vulnerability in the object of your exploitation Most dictionaries define ‘exploitation’ as

‘making use of someone or something unjustly or uneth-ically’; but they are wrong If exploitation is judged unjust

or unethical, that is not a matter of definition but is due to positive—and controversial—ethical commitments on the part of those who judge it

In the first instance, it is always some weakness or vul-nerability which is the object of exploitation A manipula-tive friend, lover, or parent exploits someone’s feelings of guilt or need for affection; a loan shark exploits a debtor’s financial emergency A tabloid exploits a celebrity’s messy divorce and also the public’s prurient tastes in reading about it; we speak of exploitation here because we take the divorce to be a point of vulnerability in the celebrity, and prurient tastes to be a weakness in the public, and we see the tabloid using these weaknesses for its own profit To

exploit a person is to use a weakness in order to gain

sub-stantial control over the person’s life or labour

Is exploitation necessarily wrong or unethical? Few think it is wrong or unethical for a chess-player to exploit her opponent’s inattention in order to win the game, or for a lawyer to exploit the weaknesses in her opponent’s case in order to win a ( just) judgement for her client Where we do think exploitation is wrong or unethical, this

is because we think that it is wrong or unethical to use those weaknesses of a person to gain your ends If we think

it is wrong to exploit a person, that is only because we think

that someone’s vulnerability should not be used to bring his or her life or labour under another’s control Yet

some—such as Nietzsche, or Callicles in Plato’s Gorgias—

have held in general that it is entirely ethical—indeed, it is only natural justice—for the strong to exploit the weak Such views cannot be cogently refuted by citing diction-ary definitions of ‘exploitation’

Views like Nietzsche’s and Callicles’ are more wide-spread than people will admit In capitalist society it is quite commonly believed just and right for people to buy and sell commodities—including one another’s labouring capacities—at whatever prices the free *market will bear Since the rate of wages is largely determined to the

exploitation 283

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advantage of employers by the fact that ownership of the

means of production puts them in a strong bargaining

position, while propertylessness puts wage labourers in a

weaker bargaining position, the resulting bargain is clearly

exploitative; nevertheless it is commonly judged by loyal

defenders of the capitalist system to be perfectly fair and

ethical Those who accept this judgement together with

the standard dictionary definition of ‘exploitation’ are then

able to deny that wage labour is exploitative, since they

hold that it is just and ethical Here we see that the

stand-ard definition of exploitation is not an innocent error, but

a pernicious ruse to protect people from having to admit

the similarity of their views to those of more honest

defenders of exploitation such as Nietzsche and Callicles

Of course the thesis that wage labour is exploitative is

now associated chiefly with the name of Karl Marx, who

gave the name ‘rate of exploitation’ to the ratio of the

labour time in which the worker produces the capitalist’s

surplus to the labour time in which the worker produces

his own wages Following what they think is Marx’s lead,

economists often provide some technical definition of

‘exploitation’—such as that of John Roemer, according to

which you are exploited if the goods you receive embody

less labour than you perform—and then use clever (and

utterly fictional) counter-examples to show that

intu-itively there need be nothing in any way objectionable

about exploitation as such (so defined) But since the

counter-examples never involve anyone’s turning

another’s weaknesses to account, what they really show is

that the technical definition is not a good definition of

exploitation

Marx, of course, thought that in the real world surplus

labour is extracted from workers through the fact that

their propertylessness puts them in a position of

vulner-ability; so he really did think they were exploited But he did

not hold that capitalist exploitation is unjust, because he

thought that since it harmonizes completely with the

sys-tem of capitalist production, it must harmonize too with

the only standards of right and justice which can be

ratio-nally applied to that system For Marx the point of

unmasking capitalist exploitation is to drive home to the

working class that the capitalist economic system is

founded on their condition of vulnerability, which it also

perpetuates through the use which the capitalist class

makes of it Whether or not someone’s exploitation of

you is just, the fact that he exploits you shows that you are

vulnerable and that someone is turning your vulnerability

to account In such a case you have good reason to do

whatever it takes to protect yourself from the exploiter,

even if doing this requires you to overthrow the entire

social order and establish one in which you are strong

enough not to be able to be exploited a.w.w

*business ethics; capitalism; invisible hand

Richard Arneson, ‘What’s Wrong with Exploitation?’, Ethics

(1981)

G A Cohen, ‘The Structure of Proletarian Unfreedom’, in John

Roemer (ed.), Analytical Marxism (Cambridge, 1986).

Karl Marx, Capital, i, tr Ben Fowkes (London, 1976).

John Roemer, ‘Should Marxists be Interested in Exploitation?’, in

John Roemer (ed.), Analytical Marxism (Cambridge, 1986).

exportation.A principle which supports inferring ‘If P then if Q then R’ from ‘If P and Q, then R’ In the *proposi-tional calculus, it is represented as the inference of (P

(Q⊃ R) ) from the premiss ( (P · Q)⊃ R) This rule of

export-ation is reflected in the theorem ( (P · Q)⊃ R)⊃ (P(Q

R) ) Since the converse of the latter is also a theorem ( (P · Q)⊃ R)≡ (P⊃ (Q⊃ R) ) is sometimes designated the principle of exportation There are systems with stronger conditionals such as *strict implication and *entailment where unrestricted exportation fails for those conditionals

r.b.m

R Barcan Marcus, ‘A Functional Calculus of First Order Based on

Strict Implication’, Journal of Symbolic Logic (1946).

B Mates, Elementary Logic (Oxford, 1972).

expression.Expression is a key concept in aesthetic the-ory—especially Romantic theory: most systematically elaborated by Croce and Collingwood Where expression

is given the chief explanatory role, artworks do not merely describe or represent emotions, they more directly com-municate an artist’s highly specific moods and feelings, and enable the appreciator to experience them also For Collingwood, the artist typically starts with a confused notion of what he feels: his creative work clarifies and stabilizes it

The communication and arousal of emotion, however, are by no means essential to appreciation What is true in the theory is that works of art are certainly bearers of sub-tly discriminated emotional qualities, the ‘feel’ of human life as lived—i.e they are ‘expressive’: and that is partly why we treasure them But not all such qualities interest

us, and not all in art that interests us is expression The val-ues of form are distinct and different: so too the disclosure

of alternative ways of seeing the common world r.w.h

R G Collingwood, The Principles of Art (Oxford, 1938).

M Mothersill, Beauty Restored (Oxford 1984), ch 12, sect 46

expressivism in ethics A theory about what is going on when people make moral judgements Basically, the view

is that people are expressing their attitudes to certain fea-tures of the world Usually, these attitudes are understood

as some species of emotion, though contemporary expres-sivists, notably *Blackburn (who calls the view quasi-realism, and applies it beyond morality) and *Gibbard, have argued that the attitude in question should not be understood as ‘mere’ emotion In this they depart from cruder forms of *emotivism and *non-cognitivism Most importantly, they argue that there are standards of cor-rectness for our value judgements, and that we are thus entitled to use value judgements in arguments and in embedded linguistic contexts Gibbard argues that the attitude we express is acceptance of a norm for behaviour The other crucial feature of contemporary expressivism is that the attitudes that we are expressing have an essentially

284 exploitation

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practical nature: we are not merely expressing our dislikes,

but legislating for ourselves and others e.j.m

*moral realism; prescriptivism

Simon Blackburn, Ruling Passions (Oxford, 2000).

Allan Gibbard, Wise Choices, Apt Feelings (Cambridge, Mass.,

1990)

extensionality. The extension of a term is roughly the

thing or set of things to which it refers The extension of

‘Socrates’ is Socrates, of ‘human’, the set of human beings

The standard semantics of the *predicate calculus is

characterized as extensional Given a fixed domain of

indi-viduals (D), assigned to each individual constant is a

mem-ber of D, to each n-adic predicate a set constructed from

elements of D which is its extension, and to each sentence

a truth-value There is no further account of meaning for

the non-logical terms Properties are identified with the

set of things which satisfy the property

Some controversial consequences follow for

non-purely mathematical applications of such extensional

systems of logic Suppose ‘featherless biped’ and ‘rational

animal’ have the same extension Given the assumption

that coextensive classes (sets) are identical (the axiom

of extensionality) those predicates should be

interchange-able *salva veritate, but there are contexts, often

designated as indirect or opaque, where the substitution

fails

Languages with such failures are characterized as

*intensional Modal languages have been so characterized

but that may be misleading There are some

interpreta-tions of modal systems where the only departures from

the standard semantics is that predicates are assigned

dif-ferent extensions in difdif-ferent worlds There is still a

reduc-tion of properties to extensions. r.b.m

*referential opacity

R Barcan Marcus, ‘Extensionality’, Mind (1960).

W V Quine, From a Logical Point of View (Cambridge, Mass.,

1953)

externalism.One of a number of views that hold that

what is thought or said (content) depends in part on

fac-tors external to the mind of the thinker or speaker One

variety of externalism holds that content is tied to how

experts use words (‘the linguistic division of labour’,

Hilary Putnam); another contends that social usage more

generally determines meaning (*‘individualism and

anti-individualism’, Tyler Burge) Kripke’s interpretation of

Wittgenstein makes social usage the source of the

possibil-ity of content In addition to these forms of social

exter-nalism there are views that make the perception of objects

or events, or other causal relations to them, conditions

for thinking and talking about such things Kripke’s

theory of the reference of proper names is an example;

so are Burge’s and Davidson’s versions of perceptual

P Ludlow and N Martin (eds.), Externalism and Self-Knowledge

(Stanford, Calif., 1998)

H Putnam, ‘The Meaning of “Meaning” ’, in Philosophical Papers, ii: Mind, Language, and Reality (Cambridge, 1975).

external relations: see internal and external relations;

relations

external world External to what? To the mind? But that does not give us a contrast in which ‘external’ applies liter-ally, as when some medicinal preparation can be used externally but is not to be taken internally The mind is here being thought of as a space or place, but in any nor-mal space things can be variously disposed, some to the left, some to the right, some in front of others, some below No such orderings are possible for anything that occurs in the mind; the ‘in’ here is purely figurative This is not to say that a contrast cannot be drawn between ‘in the mind’ and ‘in the world’, but there is nothing to which the world is literally external The world just is the domain within which external–internal distinctions apply But perhaps, without placing too great a weight on the term ‘external’, it is possible none the less to specify the problem which the existence of the external world has trad-itionally been thought to present Thus, our knowledge being held to extend to no more than our immediate experi-ences, we are supposedly afforded no secure basis for affirming the reality of abiding, public, bodies Such *scep-ticism is nowadays less common, but something of the position is preserved in the pragmatist’s claim that the existence of physical bodies is at best a useful hypothesis, a matter of theory rather than fact Could this be the truth that remains when the misconceived parallels are set aside?

There is a problem only to the extent that we are sup-posed to be given something less than the external world

to begin with Why should this be conceded? In the first place, there is some difficulty in attaching a clear sense to some of the terms which, like *‘sense-datum’ or ‘impres-sion’, are enlisted in characterizing what is presented to us

in experience Secondly, we do not in any event argue to the physical from anything, but the external world seems

to have the status of a starting-point

The sceptic might seek to meet the first point by switch-ing to the term *‘sensation’ Most discussions of the prob-lem start with the deliverances of sight, and terms such as

‘sense-datum’ may be questionable in this connection, but

it would seem that touch is at least as important in telling

us of the character of the physical—a blind man is not left

in any doubt about the substantiality of objects he touches—and the language already has in ‘sensation’ an appropriate and meaningful term geared to that sense However, the second point is more troublesome for the sceptic There are occasions when it would be rash to repose any confidence in a judgement made about a phys-ical object—as when we try to make out something at a distance and in poor light—but there are also circum-stances in which we have no realistic grounds for doubt about the modest claims in question Moreover, in such circumstances it would normally be reckoned in order

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to judge directly of the existence and character of the

bod-ies about us, and pointless to settle for anything less It is

not as if we were taking a hazardous plunge in proceeding

in this way; on the contrary, we are dealing with a

cat-egory of judgement which has stood the test of time as

well as any Nor is there any pressure to retreat to

prag-matism, to regard the existence of material bodies as

nothing more than a useful hypothesis That standing

does not suit a proposition which has everything to be said

in its favour and nothing against We may speak of theory

to acknowledge the possibility of invoking a different

range of concepts in describing the world, but this offers no threat to the factual character of our actual descriptions No less than the sceptic, the pragmatist confronts a formidable task in persuading us that the line between fact and non-fact is to be redrawn at his chosen

*body; existence; appearance and reality

A J Ayer, The Central Problems of Philosophy (London, 1973).

B Rundle, Facts (London, 1993).

L Wittgenstein, On Certainty (Oxford, 1969).

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fact.A fact is, traditionally, the worldly correlate of a true

proposition, a state of affairs whose obtaining makes that

proposition true Thus a fact is an actual state of affairs

Facts possess internal structure, being complexes of

objects and properties or relations (though facts

them-selves are abstract even when their constituents are not)

Thus the fact that Brutus stabbed Caesar contains the

objects Brutus and Caesar standing to one another (in that

order) in the relation of stabbing It is the actual obtaining

of this state of affairs that makes it true that Brutus stabbed

Caesar Difficulties for this approach do, however, arise

concerning the existence of negative, disjunctive, modal,

and moral facts For instance, should we say that what

makes the proposition that Caesar did not stab Brutus

true is the fact that he did not, or rather the

non-obtaining of the state of affairs that he did? e.j.l

*brute fact

S Neale, Facing Facts (Oxford, 2001).

B Taylor, Modes of Occurrence (Oxford, 1985).

facts, social: see social facts.

fact–value distinction This distinction, which is crucial

to moral theories of the middle and late twentieth century

such as those of A J Ayer, C L Stevenson, and R M Hare

depends on the idea that ‘good’, like ‘other evaluative

terms’, has a special function in language According to

Ayer and Stevenson it expresses *feelings and attitudes,

and according to Hare signals the acceptance of a special

kind of imperative On this basis a contrast was drawn

between these ‘evaluative’ uses of language and

‘descrip-tions of the world’; the latter, but not the former, being

supposed to ‘state facts’ Some utterances were indeed

said to be partly descriptive and partly evaluative, so

treat-ing both of *fact and *value, but the factual and the

evalu-ative elements in any word could in principle always be

factored out There was therefore a ‘logical gap’ between

‘fact’ and ‘value’, and this was taken to explain and support

the idea (derived from Hume) that no ‘ought’ can be

deduced from an ‘is’ (*‘Is’ and ‘ought’.)

Very many modern writers on moral philosophy

believe that it must be possible to describe a distinction

between fact and value such as was insisted on by Ayer, Stevenson, and Hare, but it has no place in the work of neo-Aristotelian moral philosophers such as G E M Anscombe Critics have challenged the account of evalu-ation on which the distinction draws, and doubts have also

been raised about whether value stands in opposition to

*emotivism; prescriptivism; naturalistic fallacy

A J Ayer, Language, Truth and Logic (London, 1949).

P R Foot, ‘Moral Beliefs’, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society (1958–9); repr in P R Foot (ed.), Theories of Ethics (Oxford,

1967)

R M Hare, The Language of Morals (Oxford, 1952).

C L Stevenson, Facts and Values (New Haven, Conn., 1963).

D Wiggins, ‘Truth, Invention and the Meaning of Life’, in Needs, Values, Truth (Oxford, 1987).

fairness.Formal fairness precludes bias or inconsistency

in the application of rules However, rules can be applied fairly without being substantively fair As Henry Sidgwick

observed (Methods of Ethics (1907), p 267) a rule requiring

only red-haired men to serve in the army would be sub-stantively unfair, even if this rule were always applied fairly

One popular view about substantive fairness is that it is constituted by reciprocity If one set of people (e.g red-haired men) are required to provide benefits (e.g national defence) for other people without getting proportional benefits in return, the arrangement is substantively unfair But whether substantive fairness is limited to reciprocity seems dubious

Suppose you have benefited from a communal prac-tice Suppose the benefit you received was greater than the cost you are now being asked to pay in order to sustain the practice Still, you may not be morally obligated to contribute to the practice It matters morally whether,

when you accepted the benefits, you consented to

recipro-cate If you didn’t know when you accepted the benefits that the other party conceived of your accepting the bene-fits as the first stage of an exchange, then you are not required to pay up, since you didn’t actually agree to the exchange On this view, fairness does not require all mutu-ally beneficial exchanges, but only those to which the parties actually agreed

F

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A further difficulty with limiting substantive fairness to

reciprocity is that fairness may require agents to do things

for others who will never be able to reciprocate And even

where all the relevant agents can do things for one

another, suppose these agents begin with very unequal

resources Focusing on reciprocity may obscure the

unfairness of that initial inequality

Fairness is often closely associated with *equality

Fair-ness in its broadest sense requires that any two individuals

be treated equally unless there is some morally relevant

distinction between them If the distinction between the

harder-working and the less hard-working is morally

rele-vant, then a fair arrangement will be sensitive to that

dis-tinction Because the distinction between red-haired

people and others is not morally relevant, fairness

con-demns the rule requiring only the red-haired to serve in

the army

Fairness as the consistent, unbiased application of all

and only morally relevant distinctions does not indicate

which distinctions are morally relevant b.h

*economics and morality; justice

C L Carr, On Fairness (Burlington, Vt., 2000).

J Rawls, Justice as Fairness: A Restatement (Cambridge, Mass.,

2001)

N Rescher, Fairness (New Brunswick, NJ, 2002).

faith and reason Each has been regarded as an

independ-ent source of truth, faith by virtue of what is reputedly

given to a state of conviction voluntarily produced, reason

by virtue of the outcome of compelling argument For

certain kinds of truth, access through faith rather than

rea-son has been claimed the proper course *Fideism regards

religious truths in this way Reason conceived as a source

of knowledge has also been thought capable of arriving at

divine truth (as in *arguments, types of ) But in classic

Catholic and Protestant thought, access to divine truth

requires a combination of faith and reason: while faith

itself is belief in revealed truth, reason is required to

demonstrate that revelation actually occurs That reason

can be a source of factual truth at all is denied by *Kant,

who with regard to truths previously accepted on faith

insisted that they could be accredited only to the extent

that they agree with ideals that can be rationally shown to

be embodied in moral experience In our own time,

rea-son, following *Kierkegaard, *Nietzsche, and the

*posi-tivists, relieved of its truth-finding role becomes just one

natural ability among others, paradigmatically the ability

to choose means for given ends and to calculate risk Faith

then becomes an irrational refusal to abandon a means

which reason tells us will not produce a desired result, or

else a calculated willingness to ignore the risk that it may

not do so Some claim that, with beliefs held with

cer-tainty, faith is required even where reason proclaims the

likelihood of their truth Actions actually entered upon can

be a de facto case in point, but also sincerely held religious

beliefs, since anything short of certainty will cause a doubt

which only a conscious leap of faith can erase

*Wittgen-steinians claim that reason as the tool of a fact-finding dis-course has no place in the devotional language and prac-tice of religion Against the presumption that this is a return to fideism, they may argue that there is a religious form of reason(ing), employing its own criteria to distin-guish, say, properly religious beliefs from mere supersti-tion A secularized form of faith freed from the strains involved in subjecting religious belief to the tests of reason has been proposed, which allows the more heroic forms of religious belief to be aligned with the latter a.h

A Hannay, ‘Faith and Probability’, in his Kierkegaard and Philoso-phy (London, 2003).

S Mulhall, Faith and Reason (London, 1994).

G Vattimo, Belief, tr L D’Isanto and D Webb (Cambridge,

1999)

fallacy.In logic, (1) an invalid *argument with the appear-ance of validity, or (2) a form of argument with some

invalid instances Fallacy is plainest when the argument,

or some instance of the form (called a counter-example), combines true premisses with an untrue conclusion An argument that has a fallacious form need not itself be falla-cious (this is because every argument has many forms, each displaying its structure in greater or lesser detail, and some of them are bound to be fallacious) Nevertheless, accusing an argument’s champion of relying on a falla-cious form that it has (‘You might as well argue that ’)

is often effective More widely, (3) a fallacy is any

preva-lent fault of proof, such as *begging the question or *igno-ratio elenchi, which do not involve invalidity. c.a.k

*composition and division

C L Hamblin, Fallacies (London, 1970).

fallibilism. A philosophical doctrine regarding natural science—most closely associated with C S Peirce— which maintains that our scientific knowledge-claims are invariably vulnerable and may turn out to be false On this view, scientific theories cannot be asserted as true cat-egorically, but can only be maintained as having some probability of being true Accordingly, Peirce, and Karl Popper after him, insisted that we must acknowledge an inability to attain the final and definitive truth in the the-oretical concerns of natural science—in particular at the level of theoretical physics Present-day science cannot plausibly claim to deliver a definitive picture of physical reality, regardless of the present at issue We would like to think of our science as ‘money in the bank’—as something safe, solid, and reliable—but the history of science itself militates decisively against this comfortable view of our scientific theorizing We should come to terms with the fact that—at any rate, at the scientific level of generality

and precision—each of our accepted beliefs may turn out

to be false, and many of our accepted beliefs will turn out to

be false

For Peirce, fallibilism represents a deep-rooted and far-ranging epistemological attitude: ‘I used for myself to

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collect my [logical] ideas under the designation fallibilism;

and indeed the first step toward finding out is to

acknow-ledge that you do not satisfactorily know already; so that

no blight can so surely arrest all intellectual growth as the

blight of cocksureness’ (Collected Papers, vol i, sect 1.13).

As fallibilism sees the matter, we have no assurance that

our scientific theories or systems are definitely true; they

are simply the best we can do here and now to resolve our

question regarding nature’s modus operandi New

know-ledge does not just supplement but generally upsets our

knowledge-in-hand Any scientific theory or system is the

product of human contrivance, and like any such

con-trivance—be it a house, a dam, or a knowledge-claim—it

is fragile and impermanent Every structure, be it material

or cognitive, is thus ultimately likely to encounter

condi-tions that its constructors did not anticipate—and could

not have anticipated And this circumstance renders its

ultim-ate failure likely The processes of change that come with

time always involve chance eventuations that bring new,

unforeseen, and unforeseeable circumstances to the fore

Changed social conditions destabilize social systems;

changed physical conditions destabilize physical

struc-tures; changed experiential (i.e experimental and

obser-vational) conditions—changed scientific technology, if

you will—destabilize scientific theories Rational inquiry

links the products of our understanding to the

experi-enced conditions of a world in which chance and chaos

play an ineliminable role, so that there will always be new

relations that ultimately threaten our rational

con-trivances (Of course, while we can safely predict that our

scientific theories will fail—will have to be replaced or

modified—we cannot foresee how these replacements and

modifications will be configured.)

There is much in this picture of the cognitive situation

that rings true The fact is that the equilibrium achieved

by natural science at any given stage of its development is

always an unstable one The subject’s history indicates

that scientific theories have a finite life-span; they come to

be modified or replaced under various innovative

pressures, in particular the enhancement of observational

and experimental evidence (through improved

tech-niques of experimentation, more powerful means of

observation and detection, superior procedures for

data-processing, etc.)

The striking fact is that fallibilism is a more plausible

doctrine with respect to scientific knowledge than with

respect to the less demanding *‘knowledge’ of everyday

life, such as ‘In the normal course of things humans have

one head and two hands’ Such a statement has all sorts of

implied safeguards, such as ‘more or less’, ‘in ordinary

cir-cumstances’, ‘by and large’, ‘normally’, ‘if all things are

equal’, and so on They are thus so well hedged that it is

unthinkable that contentions such as these should be

overthrown In science, however, we willingly accept

greater cognitive risks because we ask much more of the

project Here objectives are primarily theoretical and

governed by the aims of disinterested inquiry Hence the

claims of informativeness— of generality, exactness, and

precision—are paramount We deliberately court risk by aiming at maximal definiteness and thus at maximal informativeness and testability Aristotle’s view that terrestrial science deals with what happens ordinarily and

in the normal course of things has long ago been left by the wayside The theories of modern natural science have little interest in what happens generally or by and large; they seek to transact their explanatory business in terms of strict universality—in terms of what happens always and everywhere and in all kinds of circumstances We there-fore have little choice but to acknowledge the vulnerabil-ity of our scientific statements, subject to the operation of the security-definiteness trade-off Ironically, then, the

*‘common sense’ information of everyday life is securer than the ‘well-established knowledge’ science

Some philosophers (Peirce included) see fallibilism as having ethical implications They project an ethics of

belief according to which we have no right to claim

defini-tive truth for our current scientific claims, a view which they combine with a purported duty for the community of inquirers to pursue inquiry to the greatest extent realiz-able in the circumstances Accordingly, they insist that the fallibilism of our cognitive endeavours must emphatically

not be construed as an open invitation to a sceptical

aban-donment of the scientific enterprise Instead, it is an incen-tive to do the very best we can In human inquiry, the cognitive ideal is correlative with the quest for truth And this is an ideal that, like other ideals, is worthy of pursuit despite the fact that we must recognize that its satisfactory attainment lies beyond our grasp n.r

*Science, history of the philosophy of; science, prob-lems of the philosophy of

C S Peirce, Collected Papers of C S Peirce, ed C Hartshorne and P Weiss, i: Principles of Philosophy (Cambridge, Mass.,

1931); see esp sect 1.120: ‘The Uncertainty of Scientific Results’

K R Popper, The Logic of Scientific Discovery (New York, 1959).

N Rescher, The Limits of Science (Berkeley, Calif., 1984).

false consciousness A Marxian term, meaning a social awareness mystified by *ideology and ignorant of its own class basis The term actually occurs only once in the writ-ings of Marxism’s founders, in a late letter of Engels:

‘Ideology is a process accomplished by the so-called thinker, but with a false consciousness The real motive forces impelling him remain unknown to him; otherwise

it simply would not be an ideological process’ (letter to Franz Mehring of 14 July 1893) a.w.w

D Meyerson, False Consciousness (Oxford, 1991).

falsifiability.A property of a theory that, according to Karl Popper, provides a demarcation criterion between the scientific and the non-scientific A theory is falsifiable just in case it is open to empirical test and there are pos-sible empirical data that would, if observed, show the the-ory to be false Scientific generalizations, including laws, are falsifiable but not confirmable Unfalsifiable statements may be disreputable, such as those of

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