Entries by Colin McGinn

Pointless Knowledge

                                                Pointless Knowledge     God is said to be omniscient: he knows everything. There is nothing he doesn’t know, no matter how minor or inconsequential. I think this poses a problem for God’s existence, because some knowledge is pointless—and nothing about God should be pointless. It is sometimes noted that God knows about little […]

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Plurality and the Big Bang

                                                        Plurality and the Big Bang     It is said that the big bang created space and time—they did not exist beforehand. Thus something existed (a “singularity”) before space and time existed; and it was some sort of empirical particular not an abstract entity. It is generally conceived as superhot […]

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Platonic Pragmatism

                                          Platonic Pragmatism     The pragmatic theory of truth has this going for it: it recognizes that truth is something with value. Truth is something we ought to pursue and hence has a normative aspect. It is good to believe what is true and bad to believe what is false. Truth […]

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Physics and the Physical

                                        Physics and the Physical     It sounds reasonable—indeed tautological–to say that physics is about the physical, as psychology is about the psychological. But that is not clearly true. Consider Newton’s physics: it includes not only physical things in the ordinary sense but also space and time—as well as gravitational force. That […]

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Philosophy Defined

                                                    Philosophy Defined     It is an embarrassment to philosophers that they cannot define their discipline. It makes them look like shady operators. I propose to alleviate their embarrassment by offering a succinct definition of philosophy.             If you ask a physicist what physics is about, he will say that it is […]

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Philosophy As Biology

                                        Philosophy as Biology     In the 1960s linguistics took a biological turn with the work of Lenneberg and Chomsky.  [1] Language was held to be genetically fixed, a species universal, just like the anatomy of the body. It is a biological aspect of human beings, not something cultural or learned, more like […]

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Philosophical Economics

                                        Philosophical Economics     Economics tells us that an economic transaction involves the sale (or exchange) of “goods and services”. This phrase invites conceptual scrutiny. It is notable that an evaluative term is used to describe the commodities sold: goods are good.  [1] Services also are inherently valuable: you don’t perform someone the […]

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Phenomenological Ignorance

                                        Phenomenological Ignorance     We can’t know what it’s like to be a bat. This is an instance of a more general truth: no one can grasp the nature of experiences that are radically different from their own. We can grasp the nature of experiences similar to our own, but we can’t […]

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