My Honest Views

My Honest Views

I think David Lewis was off his rocker, I think Donald Davidson was far too impressed by elementary logic and decision theory, I think Willard Quine was a mediocre logician with some philosophical side-interests, I think Daniel Dennett never understood philosophy, I think Michael Dummett was a dimwit outside of his narrow specializations, I think P.F. Strawson struggled to understand much of philosophy, I think Gilbert Ryle was a classicist who wanted philosophy gone by any means necessary, I think Gareth Evans had no philosophical depth, I think John Searle was a philosophical lightweight, I think Jerry Fodor had no idea about philosophy and didn’t care, I think Saul Kripke was a mathematician with a passing interest in certain limited areas of philosophy, I think Hilary Putnam was a scientist-linguist who found philosophy incomprehensible, I think Ludwig Wittgenstein was a philosophical ignoramus too arrogant to learn some history, I think Bertrand Russell was only interested in skepticism, I think Gottlob Frege was a middling mathematician with no other philosophical interests, I think the positivists were well-meaning idiots, I think Edmund Husserl had no interest in anything outside his own consciousness, I think Martin Heidegger and John-Paul Sartre were mainly psychological politicians, I think John Austin was a scientifically illiterate language student, I think Noam Chomsky was neither a professional linguist nor a philosopher nor a psychologist but some sort of uneasy combination, I think the vast majority of current philosophers have no idea what philosophy is about and struggle to come to terms with it, I think philosophy has been a shambles since Descartes, I think Plato and Aristotle were philosophical preschoolers, I think no one has ever really grasped the nature of philosophical problems, I think the human brain is a hotbed of bad philosophy (and that is its great glory).

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A New Theory of Knowledge

A New Theory of Knowledge

Knowledge is the conscious impingement of the world on the soul. I don’t think we can do better than this after all these years: it captures the essence. Knowledge is the (conscious) impingement of the world on the soul. These are its conceptual ingredients. Forget true justified belief, or acquaintance, or perception, or certainty: knowledge is to be defined as reality consciously impinging on the soul. I can’t say it any more clearly without sliding into falsehood. The world impinges on the soul, consciously so, and when it does knowledge is the upshot. World, soul, consciousness, impingement—these are the elements that make up the concept of knowledge, neither more nor less.

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John Searle, Philosopher

John Searle, Philosopher

I will give my personal opinion (i.e., the truth) about John Searle as a philosopher. He was clearly a brilliant and clever man, not to be tangled with; he was also a lucid and bracing writer. He was right about a great many things (I intend this as high praise). He was a much better philosopher than the vast majority of professional philosophers. But (and you must have seen this “but” coming) I found him curiously superficial, sometimes glib (proudly so), overly wedded to commonsense, not always interesting. I found his prose style flat and sparkless, a bit lackluster, lacking in charm or wit (though generally quite clear). I didn’t feel much zing or novelty of expression. I think he was stuck in the Oxford of his student days: all philosophy needs is some simple no-nonsense common sense to sort out its problems. Profundity was scorned. This led to problem-dodging and a lack of intellectual depth. It all seemed so obvious to him, or that was his manner. He was a good critic but not much of a theoretician. He didn’t stir me philosophically. In this he contrasted with other philosophers of his generation—Davidson, Fodor, Nagel, Lewis, Kripke, Rawls, and others. Truth is, I found him somewhat boring as a philosopher—despite his many virtues. I also think he was ahistorical, like his Oxford mentors.

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007

007

Beautiful Bond-girl to Bond: “So, 007, what is your name?”

Bond: “Bond, James Bond”.

Girl: “Ah, James Bond”.

Bond: “No, Bond James-Bond”.

Girl: “I see. Hello Mr. James-Bond. Or should I call you Bond?”.

Bond: “Bond would be fine. And what is your name?”

Girl: “Pussy, Pussy Galore”.

Bond: “Interesting—Pussy Galore”.

Girl: “No, it is Pu Sygalore, of the Sygalore family”.

Bond: “Yes, the Sygalores—I’ve heard of them. What should I call you Ms. Sygalore?”

Girl: “You can call me Pussy, everyone does”.

Bond: “And why is that Pussy?”

Girl: “Because of my magnificent vagina, of course.”

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Biography of Nabokov

Biography of Nabokov

I have just finished reading the first volume of Brain Boyd’s magisterial (there is no other word) biography of Nabokov. At 500 pages it covers only his years in Russia and other European countries. I have never felt so steeped in the great man, and I have been seriously steeped. I now know the length and shape of his toenails. I wrote to Professor Boyd (who is writing a biography of Karl Popper) just to exchange thoughts with a fellow Nabokovian of genuine distinction. I sent him my little essays on Lolita, which appear on this blog. We had a lively correspondence. What struck me with particular force was the remarkable combination of facets that compose Nabokov’s person and personality: tall, slender, handsome, Russian, multi-lingual, a poet, a playwright, a novelist, a lepidopterist, a boxer, a chess player, a tennis player, and a goalkeeper. Many men in one man. Is there any unity to be found there? If there is, it is not easily discernible. The closest common factor I can see is the aesthete—but of a broad kind. I see it in the writing, obviously, but also in the chess, tennis, butterflies, and even in the boxing and goal-keeping. I can’t think of a good parallel in other Great Men, but I sense some of it in myself: I too combine the athletic with the writerly without sensing any schism. I also had a fascination with butterflies as a boy (and still do: I am rearing some caterpillars now); I even enjoyed the martial arts in my younger days, particularly wrestling. But back to Nabokov: his vision, his dedication, his arrogance (add inverted commas), his uncompromising attitude, his loves and hates, his genius, his uniqueness. He packed a lot into one man, one life. He never wrote about himself in his fictional works, but it is easy to see him as a Nabokovian character—half human, half mythical, smooth, brittle, heroic, touchy, tough, not afraid of a fight, dreamy. He is a kind of good Humbert Humbert. I’m looking forward to reading the second volume of his biography, dealing with his American incarnation and the unleashing of Lolita.

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Inside the Baseline

Inside the Baseline

Most serious tennis players start their practice session with a few minutes of mini-tennis, i.e., hitting the ball softly within the service area. This gets you used to controlling the ball. I like to supplement this with what I call aggressive mini-tennis: hitting the ball as fast as you can within the service area but with enough spin to keep it in. The essence of this is that you are going to feel stupid if you hit hard and miss, so you have to adjust speed with spin to keep the ball down; most amateur players find it extremely difficult to do. It is a very demanding routine. I also like to do this by stepping back a few feet and doing the same thing at three-quarters court. Yesterday I was doing this with my tennis friends Robert and Jose. The next stage is to go back to just inside the baseline and hit with maximum depth and power—but without backing up, ever. This means you are hitting the ball at half-volley quite often, indeed quarter-volley; it even means you sometimes have to hit a full volley from just inside the baseline—not easy. Just for the hell of it I decided to hit with my partners this way the whole time, but they could step back as much as they liked. I was playing two guys simultaneously from inside the baseline. I noticed a few things. It is really nice to be that close in because you get better angles and have less distance to run forward (the drop shot is far less effective). You feel you have the edge. It isn’t all that difficult to do, just a matter of a couple of feet from normal positioning. Second, it is good practice for when you do step back. Third, it is possible to volley from that far back, which takes time away from the opponent. I wonder why players never adopt this strategy: they have gotten used to hugging the baseline and reaping the benefits, so why not go a step further? I plan to try it out more systematically. It is certainly intimidating to the opponent. No more backing up! Sure, you’re going to miss some, but it forces the opponent to go for deep shots, which results in long balls, and it also puts you automatically in charge of the rally. Everybody knows the advantages of rushing to the net for a volley; this is the same principle but practiced from the baseline. Is it just tennis convention that has held people back, literally? Since I now play with two hands, I will be doing this from inside the court—unorthodox.

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Morality, Relativism, and Supervenience

Morality, Relativism, and Supervenience

I find it hard to believe that the point I am about to make has not been made before, so I state that it must have been. If so, this may serve as a welcome repetition, for the point is a good one. It is that moral supervenience and moral relativism are inconsistent with each other. The former says that moral predications supervene on the natural, descriptive, or factual properties of the act in question: if one, then necessarily the other. Nothing needs to be added to get to the moral predication; in no possible world does the entailment fail to hold. But moral relativism claims that the underlying non-moral properties are not sufficient for the moral ones, since the latter are dependent on the attitudes of a given individual or group of individuals. The former properties are intrinsic to the act or state of affairs, but the latter are relational: the moral property is relative to a community, and so can vary from community to community depending on the attitudes held. But that is inconsistent with the assertion that the moral supervenes on the intrinsic non-moral properties of the act. For moral opinions and other attitudes are not supervenient on those underlying non-moral properties (e.g., the fact that someone is in pain). Opinions and facts are not necessarily correlated, but values and facts are. Being good is supervenient on non-value facts, but being thought to be good is not—that depends on the properties of the appraiser. Thus, moral relativism is inconsistent with moral supervenience.

So what–can’t we just give up supervenience? The inconsistency is certainly a pause-giving result, but is abandoning supervenience available to a relativist otherwise demolished? But how could it be that two situations are exactly alike in all non-moral respects and yet differ morally? Don’t right and wrong, good and bad, depend on the facts of the case? If not, they are worthless categories; we may as well just talk only about attitudes and get it over with. Then we have the anodyne doctrine that people can have different attitudes towards the same thing, perhaps because of ignorance; we don’t have the startling claim that one and the same thing can be both good and bad (at the same time). We don’t have to say that pain can be bad here but not bad elsewhere, despite being exactly the same in both places (except location). Supervenience certainly has common sense on its side; relativism is mind-numbingly revisionary—and for what? But we can say more: we can cite the factual properties of a situation in order to justify a moral evaluation, but that won’t work under relativism. We can say that the existence of pain justifies the assertion that it’s wrong to stick a pin in someone, but the relativist can’t say that—he has to say that the justification for not sticking a pin in someone is that other people are not of the opinion that pain is bad. That is what the moral evaluation depends upon not the fact of pain itself. The normal practice of moral evaluation collapses once supervenience is denied, because it is really neither here nor there what people think about pain; what matters is pain itself. So, supervenience can’t be rationally abandoned. But it is inconsistent with moral relativism. Therefore, moral relativism must be rejected. Values are not the same as opinions about them.[1]

[1] This is really an absolute truism, hardly worth enunciating, but relativism has a remarkable hold over the callow mind, so truisms must be treated as contentious doctrines to be ingeniously argued for. Why morality should excite such skepticism I don’t know. No one thinks that we should give up supervenience about the mind because people have minds only relative to a community! No one thinks that being in pain depends on whether people think you are in pain. That would be insane. Yet they think that pain’s being bad depends on people thinking it’s bad. Pain is bad no matter what some idiot happens to think.

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Is Stupidity Innate?

Is Stupidity Innate?

This is a question people are too polite to raise. We can just about ask whether intelligence is innate, wholly or partly, but please don’t ask whether some people are born stupid! Can it be responsibly maintained that some people are condemned by their genes to a life of stupidity? And here I mean common-or-garden stupidity, not the clinical kind; I am referring to ordinary adults and their opinions—political, scientific, philosophical, ethical, practical. Some people are very intelligent compared to others as a result of their genes; could some people be very stupid compared to others as a result of their genes? Could you be born a stupid person, as opposed to acquiring stupidity from the environment in which you were raised? Is there a stupidity gene that some people have and others don’t?

It might be replied that this is trivially true, since some people are less intelligent genetically than others; if we call these individuals “stupid”, then, yes, they are innately stupid (i.e., on the low end of the intelligence spectrum). Just as some people are born brighter than others, so some are born stupider than others, with some just straight-out stupid. But that is not what I mean; I mean “stupid” in its colloquial sense. Admittedly, this is not easy to pin down (as is the concept of intelligence): the OED gives us only “lacking intelligence or common sense”. But what is stupidity more positively characterized—what is its specific nature? Interestingly, Roget’s Thesaurus gives us a long list of synonyms, which I will not repeat, thus suggesting a clear and distinct psychological trait identifiable by any normal person. What emerges is that stupidity is poor judgment, proneness to error, rashness of opinion, foolishness, unthinkingness, gullibility, unreflectiveness, and logical ineptitude. People are often said to be stupid in matters of love and money, but also in their political attitudes (various kinds of prejudice, in particular). I think we know it when we see it. I want to know whether thisconstellation of traits might be innate—caused by a stupidity gene. It would be possible to have this gene but be quite intelligent otherwise; there might even be stupid geniuses! You could be super-smart at math but remarkably stupid in politics or practical matters.

From a lifetime of observation, I am convinced that stupidity is likely inborn. You just have to talk to people to notice it. It seems to run in families, like its opposite. It is correlated with other traits that are plausibly regarded as innate—emotionality, conformity, impulsiveness, verbal crudity, anger, hot-headedness. People who latch onto wild conspiracy theories fit the profile perfectly, as well as people who never see anything coming (like Austin Powers about Liberace’s gayness). They also seem humorless, or at least humorously simple-minded. It seems like a positive lack, if I may put it so; it’s as if they have something definite in them that makes them stupid, and they like it that way. There doesn’t seem to be much intermediate ground between them and their less stupid brethren; you are either stupid or not stupid, never a bit stupid or only when tired or drunk. Stupidity doesn’t come in degrees, like intelligence in the IQ sense. It is a kind of congenital blindness (“reason blindness”). There is a marked reluctance to reason from facts and logic. It doesn’t align exactly with the right and left in politics; there is plenty of left-wing stupidity (and tons of right-wing stupidity). It is really like a genetically determined syndrome. Logic is powerless against it; facts wash over the victim’s countenance. Vehemence replaces cogency. I would like to see a psychologist do some research on this subject instead of focusing on intelligence all the time; twin studies would be the place to start.[1] I don’t think we would find any racial or national preponderance of the stupidity gene; I think we would find a common incidence across peoples and cultures. What is the proportion of people that harbor the stupidity gene? Now that is an incendiary question: I am going to say anything between 30% and 70%, but that estimate may be influenced by spending my life among professional philosophers (cooks might do better). In any case, it’s a hypothesis to ponder; it would be stupid not to.[2]

[1] Do identical twins reared apart score high on a stupidity test if one does? Does stupidity appear earlier ontogenetically than can be explained by environmental factors? Can it be remedied by intensive anti-stupidity training?

[2] I suspect that this is an extremely taboo subject for a number of reasons, some good and some not so good. Who would want to take part in a study of human stupidity? Who would want to be told they scored high in the stupidity rankings? How might such information be used? What if the CEO of an important company were to be revealed as really quite stupid? What if people from Yorkshire were to be rated as markedly stupid? We might need a euphemism for marketing purposes, say “neuro-variant”.

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