Lawson-Frost Sasha
Philosophy Department, University College London, 19 Gordon Square, London, WC1H 0AW UK.
Philosophia (Ramat Gan). 2017;45(3):1235-1251. doi: 10.1007/s11406-016-9805-9. Epub 2017 Jan 13.
Cartesian scepticism poses the question of how we can justify our belief that other humans experience consciousness in the same way that we do. Wittgenstein's response to this scepticism is one that does not seek to resolve the problem by providing a sound argument against the Cartesian sceptic. Rather, he provides a method of philosophical inquiry which enables us to move past this and continue our inquiry without the possibility of solipsism arising as a philosophical problem in the first place. In this paper, I propose that Wittgenstein's method of dismissing the Cartesian sceptic can also be applied to the problems posed by the 'moral sceptic', who denies the truth of all ethical or moral claims. I will argue that in the same way Wittgenstein's focus on public language enables us to dismiss the traditional problem of other minds, a focus on public moral practices or language-games also enables us to dismiss the idea that moral claims are always 'meaningless', 'false' or 'nonsensical'. On this account, the moral sceptic is misguided in much the same way as the solipsist who implicitly admits the existence of other minds in her practices. The moral sceptic who still engages in moral activities also implicitly admits the existence of meaningful moral positions. Wittgenstein's dismissal of the Cartesian sceptic, as I understand it, can be broadly divided into two parts. The first part is an account of language acquisition. This part outlines how we might come to see other humans as conscious, thinking, feeling beings from a causal perspective. This suggests that we can arrive at an understanding of other minds as a primary perception itself - without needing to posit this perception as a kind of deductive or inductive hypothesis. Secondly, we can see how this relates to an epistemic model of language. This focuses on the role of language as something which consists of rule-governed activities, where the existence of other minds is embedded in our understanding of the world as a kind of grammatical rule, rather than an observational hypothesis. From both these arguments the Cartesian sceptic is, (on Wittgenstein's account), irrelevant to some forms of philosophical inquiry. This is because the sceptic takes the existence of other minds to be a rational hypothesis/inference when it is not. I suggest that this approach can be applied to moral scepticism if we take certain normative claims as grammatical dispositions (practical and tautological), rather than rational or metaphysical propositions. Hence, the moral sceptic who offers a rational or logical critique of these moral foundations is not necessarily saying anything relevant to our practices - the moral stances which they refute as rationally meaningless were never based on purely rational or logical hypotheses in the first place.
我们如何能够证明我们的信念,即其他人以与我们相同的方式体验意识。维特根斯坦对这种怀疑主义的回应并非试图通过提供一个有力的论据来反驳笛卡尔怀疑论者来解决这个问题。相反,他提供了一种哲学探究方法,使我们能够超越这个问题,继续我们的探究,而不会让唯我论首先作为一个哲学问题出现。在本文中,我提出维特根斯坦驳斥笛卡尔怀疑论者的方法也可以应用于“道德怀疑论者”提出的问题,道德怀疑论者否认所有伦理或道德主张的真实性。我将论证,就像维特根斯坦对公共语言的关注使我们能够摒弃他人心灵的传统问题一样,对公共道德实践或语言游戏的关注也使我们能够摒弃道德主张总是“无意义”、“错误”或“荒谬”的观点。据此,道德怀疑论者的误导方式与唯我论者在其实践中隐含地承认他人心灵的存在的方式非常相似。仍然参与道德活动的道德怀疑论者也隐含地承认有意义的道德立场的存在。据我理解,维特根斯坦对笛卡尔怀疑论者的驳斥大致可分为两部分。第一部分是关于语言习得的阐述。这部分概述了我们如何从因果关系的角度开始将其他人视为有意识、有思想、有情感的存在。这表明我们可以将对他人心灵的理解本身作为一种基本感知——而无需将这种感知假定为一种演绎或归纳假设。其次,我们可以看到这与一种语言的认知模型有何关联。这部分关注语言作为由规则支配的活动的作用,在这种活动中,他人心灵的存在作为一种语法规则嵌入在我们对世界的理解中,而不是作为一个观察假设。从这两个论证来看,(按照维特根斯坦的说法)笛卡尔怀疑论者与某些形式的哲学探究无关。这是因为怀疑论者将他人心灵的存在视为一个合理的假设/推论,而实际上并非如此。我认为,如果我们将某些规范性主张视为语法倾向(实践的和重言式的),而不是合理的或形而上学的命题,那么这种方法可以应用于道德怀疑论。因此,对这些道德基础进行合理或逻辑批判的道德怀疑论者不一定在说与我们的实践相关的任何事情——他们作为合理无意义而驳斥的道德立场从一开始就从未基于纯粹的合理或逻辑假设。