Hi Paul
But even to decide if it's coherent requires some epistemological framework! Without one, I could reject logic itself and claim that both statements can be true at once.
I must not understand what philosophers mean by epistemology.
I don't think that the law of non-contradiction counts as epistemology, no. Rorty certainly doesn't include it as such.
At it's core, I think that the law of non-contradiction falls under the category of
ontology of logic. It certainly feeds into other areas of philosophy: logic, metaphysics and epistemology being the obvious cases. And you might be surprised at the number of philosophers who even reject the law of non-contradiction. If pushed, I might even have to count myself as one of them.....
But Rorty can certainly get away with adhering to the law of non-contradiction without being accused of "indulging in epistemology".
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The difference is that the foundationalist (be he a materialist or be he an insane idealist like lifegazer) is limited to interpreting everything he encounters within the boundaries of the framework of his foundation. Everything else is rejected, resisted, ignored or attacked. So large swathes of philosophy and the human sciences end up being meaningless - or at the very least completely disconnected from any "secure knowledge". A coherentist doesn't have any such problem.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I don't understand what you're saying. The foundational framework can be quite general, as it is with scientific epistemology and no underlying metaphysic. Or does the foundational framework necessarily entail ontology?
Is "scientific epistemology"
really general? Seems quite specific to me.
Foundationalism doesn't neccesarily entail ontology. It just usually does entail ontology. The basic definition of foundationalism is any system of epistemic justification which relies on a certain set of "basic beliefs" which serve as a foundation for other beliefs. Materialism and Idealism are just the most obvious and most commonly held "basic beliefs" and, somewhat paradoxically, believers of both systems hold their "basic beliefs" to self-evident.
Having said all that...
http://www.phenomenologyonline.com/articles/miedema.html
Postmodern View, Pedagogy, and the Future
What needs to be done in order to overcome the postmodern predicament? From a pedagogical point of view we should, in line with Rorty, avoid every foundationalism related to ontology and epistemology and plead for a renewed attention for value orientation and ethics.
So its possible to be a foundationalist whose foundational beliefs are neither ontological nor epistemological. You clearly aren't an ontological foundationalist, but you probably
are some sort of epistemological foundationalist and because of the epistemological viewpoint you have adopted it is effectively the same as materialistic foundationalism. Any scientific foundationalism is practicaly indistinguishable from materialistic foundationalism, from my POV. At least, science would need to evolve quite considerably before a scientific foundationalist could manage to avoid being a materialist foundationalist in everything but name.
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Perhaps Rorty's position looks unneccesary to you - but you are thinking like a scientist and Rorty is a philosopher (even if he's a bit of an odd philosopher). I mean...isn't it clear that a foundationalist is forced to think inside a box, whereas a coherentist is not? The foundationalist will always try to argue that it's a very good box to think inside - perhaps the only box worth thinking inside.....but he remains stuck in his box.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
But a coherent system of knowledge will require a box, too. If I truly want no box at all, then I have to say that anything goes, which is just silly.
That's not true. "Anything goes" was Feyerabends light-hearted quip about what constitutes an historically-accurate description of what makes science
science. It certainly isn't true of coherentist theories of justification, because "anything goes" includes things which aren't coherent. It's not a box. The limitations on the coherentist are simply that all the knowledge he has accumulated, from all the different "towers", fits together as a coherent whole with no contradictions. This is in fact not an easy trick to pull off. It's actually quite restrictive. Personally, I have considerable difficulty pulling it off, which is why I hinted that if pushed I might even reject the law of non-contradiction. But the coherentist doesn't have a "box" in the way that a foundationalist does, because the coherentist has no "basic beliefs" which aren't justified by other beliefs. For the coherentist,
every belief must be justified by it's coherency with all the others. For the foundationalist, the "basic beliefs" aren't justified at all - because they are supposedly "self-evident".
So if the question is "Is Paul a foundationalist?" then I have to ask you "Do you have some
basic beliefs upon which all the other are built, or do you belief that everything you believe has to be supported by everything else you believe? If the answer is yes (to the former), then
what are those basic beliefs?"
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yet you have already acknowledged that the two most commonly accepted foundations (materialism and idealism) are incoherent! From this POV, you sound like you ought to be a coherentist. Yet, when push comes to shove, you turn to epistemology and end up with a knowledge-system that looks almost exactly like materialism and end up being a foundationalist-by-proxy.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If this is so, then non-materialists are rejecting more than simply the idea that everything is made up from some "physical material." All I'm suggesting for an epistemology is something like "everything real can be described according to consistent rules that can be determined through observation of effects."
I think this just leads to questions about what you mean by "observation of effects". I suspect you would define "observation" differently to me. This is where my debates with SJC tend to break down - every time he claims it is possible to "observe somebody-else's mind". He has defined subjective experiences as brain processes and then claims he can observe a mind by observing the brain processes. If you would agree with that sort of claim then I think your epistemology ends up being ontology - because of the way you define "observe" and other words. For me, the only thing I observe is the contents of my own mind. Everything else is inferred, intuited or deduced.
I'm not sure what we can ease up in those axioms without also dooming Rorty's coherent system project.
Perhaps Rorty sees science as having a much more complicated ontologyical/epistemological basis, and so sees science as being in a tight box. I don't think science is as boxed in as he does.
This is interesting because it brings home the constant debate about whether skeptics reject claim X because it clashes with their metaphysic, or simply because the evidence is not convincing. I think it is most often the latter.
Well I think the problem there is what you find "convincing" and why you find it so. I've already said that the prime reason most skeptics find those claims of paranormalism which don't actually contradict science to be "unconvincing" has more to do with their underlying ontological beliefs than anything else. When I was a materialist I would have found it very difficult indeed to be convinced by any evidence at all that such things existed, simply because I had no way of incorporating them into my worldview. And I am not trying to downplay the power of the reasoning which holds those people in it's grip. Given Big Bang theory and Darwinism, materialism really does seem like the only game in town. It's only when you really stare the mind-body problem in the face that you are forced to seriously question it, and even
then you are likely to be left with more questions than answers.