Tuesday, July 13, 2010
When Mystery's All That's Left
Our collaborator on this blog, the esteemed Mr.Wolfus Andronicus, has launched a compelling attack on many of the central claims of Jim Brown’s Platonic account of thought experiments. I am very sympathetic to most of the concerns raised in his paper. In particular, I share his worry as to how Brown proposes to arbitrate between (apparently) Platonic TE’s which disagree. I want, however, to draw attention to a point which I think is certainly challengeable. This is the claim that for an explanation to be acceptable, the explanans cannot be a bigger mystery than the explanandum. Mr. Andronicus continues, that by which we explain some phenomenon must be “comparatively more acceptable, palatable, understood, uncontroversial…” (pg.15). This is apparently put forward as a universal regulatory principle by which we can eliminate faulty explanations. It seems to me, however, that it is going to toss out many a good baby with the bathwater. There are extremely fruitful explanations, especially in science, which seem to violate this principle. It seems to me that scientists often work something like in the following way. They begin with some observable phenomenon (the explanandum) which is itself wholly uncontroversial. Then various explanations for this phenomenon are considered. Controversy ensues over which is the correct explanation. More often than not, a consensus is eventually reached. The move here is from an uncontroversial explanandum to an (at least initially) highly controversial explanans. Perhaps it is the terms 'controversial' and 'palatable' that are throwing me here(if so, I'm not sure how crucial Mr. Andronicus takes this point to be.)So what I am suggesting is that sometimes a controversial, initially unpalatable explanans turns out to in fact be the best or only way to make sense of the (uncontroversial) phenomenon to be explained. Likewise, it could in principle turn out that the epistemic power of (platonic) thought experiments could only be accounted for by appeal to some heretofore unknown faculty of platonic perception. The fact that such perception is more mysterious than what it is supposed to explain is thus in my view not enough to rule out the possibility that it is explanatorily indispensable. If it were indispensible in this fashion, it might still not provide a satisfying or unmysterious explanation. But it would be the best we could do. Of course, the mystery of Platonic perception may still provide good reasons to prefer another explanation if such is available.It suggests to me that the Platonic account should be a last resort to turn out to when all other attempts to explain what TE's do fail.
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Thanks very much, Joey. It's funny, I've been beating myself up precisely on that point for the past three days - I actually came up with the same counterexample (i.e. explaining an ordinary perceptual observation via some hypothesis, the latter being more mysterious almost by definition). I've been tweaking things a little, and I've definitely relaxed the bold, all-or-nothing claim about moving from the less mysterious to the more mysterious. Part of what I've been doing is cutting out certain terms which only serve to confuse the point, e.g. 'controversial' - the point isn't so much about controversy as it's about *understanding*. I still think that explanations *are* explanatory precisely in virtue of making sense of what's mysterious to us - if something was completely non-mysterious (i.e. if we knew clearly just about everything there was to know about it), why would we need an explanation at all? In less ideal cases, something is relatively non-mysterious and some aspect of it requires explanation. My worry (which, again, I take too far in my initial characterization) is that in cases where something is deeply mysterious (e.g. how we can knowledge of natural world without empirical input), it seems a total non-starter to offer as an explanation something that's even more mysterious than what we're trying to explain. The explanandum is what we're "dumb" (viz. explananDUM lol) about - what dialectical sense does it make to explain what we're dumb about via something that we're even dumber about?
ReplyDeleteYeah, moderated in that way, what you're suggesting makes a lot of sense to me as well. And as I suggest towards the end, I think the 'element of mystery'concerning P-perception places Jim in a dialectically weaker position than Norton or mental model theorists. To make his Platonism sufficiently attractive to offset its eerieness, he has to make it plausible that there is not, even in principle, any other way of accounting for the epistemic reach of TE's. This is a lot to expect, but I think the nature of his view places him in this unfortunate position.
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