Are Intuitions Treated as Evidence? Cases from Political Philosophy*

IF 2.9 1区 哲学 Q1 ETHICS
Sebastian J. Conte
{"title":"Are Intuitions Treated as Evidence? Cases from Political Philosophy*","authors":"Sebastian J. Conte","doi":"10.1111/jopp.12277","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>It is a common view that philosophers treat intuitions as evidence for philosophical theories. Following Herman Cappelen, we may refer to this view as centrality.1 Advocates of centrality typically assume that claims about cases (henceforth, case verdicts) are treated as evidence for and against philosophical theories because of their intuitiveness. On the basis of their examination of prominent philosophers’ use of cases, however, critics of centrality, like Cappelen and Max Deutsch, claim that philosophers <i>argue</i> for case verdicts, and take that to suggest that advocates of centrality are mistaken in their assumption that the intuitiveness of the verdicts plays an epistemic role.2 I’ll refer to these critics as “intuition deniers.”3 The intuition deniers’ rejection of centrality has launched a considerable debate over the nature of the philosophical method and the role of intuitions in philosophical argument.</p><p>This article contributes to that debate by investigating cases from a genre of philosophy—political philosophy—that has not been the main focus so far. Within this branch (and within moral philosophy more generally), not only has it been claimed that intuitions are treated as evidence,4 but some claim that not doing so would leave the prospects of the discipline quite bleak.5 I respond to the challenge of providing positive evidence for centrality—a challenge posed by Cappelen6—by developing an analytical framework. This framework will also help develop a common response to the intuition deniers’ arguments: that they mistake abductive arguments—in which case verdicts function as premises that support a theoretical account—for arguments that support case verdicts.</p><p>I examine cases from two influential articles in which some of the first attempts to formulate different versions of luck egalitarianism were made: Ronald Dworkin’s “What Is Equality? Part 1” and Gerald A. Cohen’s “On the Currency of Egalitarian Justice.”7 I argue that a close examination of these articles indicates that their authors do treat intuitions as evidence. Both Dworkin and Cohen treat case verdicts as starting points for abductive arguments and use intuition-terminology (“intuition,” “intuitively,” and cognate terms) to express or to refer to these verdicts. I argue that the conjunction of these two observations constitutes positive evidence that they treat intuitions as evidence.</p><p>Cohen and Dworkin are viewed as being among the most influential thinkers in the literature on justice, and their discussion of expensive tastes is viewed as one of the most important debates in 1980s and 1990s political philosophy. Many regard them as two of the principal luck egalitarian thinkers.8 Due to their influence and importance, examining these articles is interesting in and of itself. Moreover, I think the current inquiry is of general interest. If centrality is false, we would not expect to find that intuitions figure as central evidence in influential contributions. Moreover, the issue Dworkin and Cohen raise and discuss in the articles I examine—the role of responsibility—pertains to distributive ideals in general.9 Finally, I think that Dworkin’s and Cohen’s articles are representative of a common style of argument. Their arguments seem to share a structure with a large range of arguments in political philosophy more generally. Thus, the articles seem representative of common methods of argumentation in political philosophy.10</p><p>I proceed as follows. First, I provide some clarifying remarks on centrality and intuitions. Second, I provide a brief overview of the debate and present Cappelen’s challenge to provide positive evidence for centrality. Third, I develop an analytical framework in response to the challenge. Fourth, I apply the framework in an analysis of Dworkin’s and Cohen’s articles. Finally, I briefly consider some objections to the analysis and conclude.</p><p>Considering that centrality is an overly general claim to examine in a single article, I derive a narrower hypothesis from it, but first I will clarify how intuitions are understood in this study.</p><p>Based on examinations of philosophical practice, and the method of cases in particular, it has been argued that case verdicts are not supported by appeals to intuition.18 Instead, philosophers support such verdicts by arguing for them. Thus, the assumption is that a verdict being argued for is a good indication that the verdict’s intuitiveness is not treated as evidence for the verdict. I refer to this position as the “argument view.”</p><p>A common reply to the argument view is that the idea that arguments support verdicts is compatible with the intuitiveness of the verdicts being treated as evidence. For example, the arguments’ role could be to shore up the intuition.19 Another common response is that the intuition deniers fail to see that some of the arguments they identify are actually abductive arguments with intuitions as starting points.20 Thus, support goes in the opposite direction to what the intuition deniers assume: that is, from case verdict to theoretical account. I will refer to the second response as the “explanation view.”</p><p>One problem with the first response is that it only establishes the <i>possibility</i> that intuitions are treated as evidence. However, more than that is needed to defend centrality, according to the intuition deniers. If a philosopher invokes arguments in defense of a case verdict, they claim, the verdict is supported regardless of whether its intuitiveness is treated as evidence. Thus, one needs positive evidence that the verdict’s intuitiveness is doing any work.21 I will refer to this challenge as “the positive-evidence challenge.”</p><p>The second response also falls short of the positive-evidence challenge, according to the intuition deniers. At best, those who have defended the explanation view would have showed that a given argument can <i>also</i> be interpreted as abductive. In that case, one should assume that the support goes in both directions and, thus, that the case verdict does not carry any independent evidential weight. Moreover, case verdicts are not necessarily treated as starting points for such inferences <i>because</i> they are intuitive.22</p><p>As the discussion above demonstrated, friends of centrality need to confront the positive-evidence challenge to sustain their responses to the intuition deniers’ argument. It is useful to think of the positive-evidence challenge in terms of two hurdles. First, we need to demonstrate that case verdicts are treated as evidence. Second, we need to demonstrate that they are treated as evidence because they are intuitive.</p><p>In their articles, Dworkin and Cohen articulate accounts of the political ideal of equality—equality of resources (ER) and equal access to advantage (EAA), respectively—that are commonly labeled luck egalitarian. ER holds that resources should be distributed equally, whereas EAA holds that access to advantage should be distributed equally. These accounts are developed in response to a third account of equality, equality of welfare (EW), which holds that the proper currency of egalitarian theories is welfare. What Dworkin and Cohen find unsatisfactory about EW is that it does not take into account an agent’s responsibility. This is something they try to remedy when formulating their own theories. Their discussions of expensive tastes are critical to their argument and I will focus on them here.</p><p>I start by outlining Dworkin’s and Cohen’s discussion of expensive tastes, particularly the Louis case, in some detail, italicizing parts of the quotes that are important for the discussion to follow. This is necessary to provide the reader with the relevant passages for interpreting the arguments. I then illustrate the difficulty in determining whether case verdicts are argued for or treated as starting points for abductive arguments, which stress the need for the analytical framework I developed above. I then use that framework to analyze the articles and test my hypothesis.</p><p>In this section, I consider some objections to the diagnostics that I have applied—that is, abduction and intuition-terminology.</p><p>In this article, I have investigated a hypothesis derived from centrality: intuitions served as central evidence when Dworkin and Cohen first articulated and debated luck egalitarianism. To do this, I developed an analytical framework that overcomes the positive-evidence challenge. I have argued that if case verdicts are treated as starting points for abductive arguments, it suggests that they are treated as evidence. Therefore, the framework offers diagnostics for identifying whether case verdicts are so treated. Moreover, I have argued that if case verdicts treated as starting points for abductive arguments are referred to using intuition-terminology, that gives us reason to believe that the case verdicts are treated as evidence <i>because</i> they are intuitive. When examining Dworkin’s and Cohen’s discussion of expensive tastes, case verdicts are treated as starting points for abductive arguments and referred to using intuition-terminology.</p><p>One particularly important lesson from this study is that we need to examine how a philosopher treats the case verdicts she reaches and how these relate to the various theoretical accounts under consideration in order to properly assess whether that philosopher is arguing for a case verdict or arguing abductively. 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引用次数: 3

Abstract

It is a common view that philosophers treat intuitions as evidence for philosophical theories. Following Herman Cappelen, we may refer to this view as centrality.1 Advocates of centrality typically assume that claims about cases (henceforth, case verdicts) are treated as evidence for and against philosophical theories because of their intuitiveness. On the basis of their examination of prominent philosophers’ use of cases, however, critics of centrality, like Cappelen and Max Deutsch, claim that philosophers argue for case verdicts, and take that to suggest that advocates of centrality are mistaken in their assumption that the intuitiveness of the verdicts plays an epistemic role.2 I’ll refer to these critics as “intuition deniers.”3 The intuition deniers’ rejection of centrality has launched a considerable debate over the nature of the philosophical method and the role of intuitions in philosophical argument.

This article contributes to that debate by investigating cases from a genre of philosophy—political philosophy—that has not been the main focus so far. Within this branch (and within moral philosophy more generally), not only has it been claimed that intuitions are treated as evidence,4 but some claim that not doing so would leave the prospects of the discipline quite bleak.5 I respond to the challenge of providing positive evidence for centrality—a challenge posed by Cappelen6—by developing an analytical framework. This framework will also help develop a common response to the intuition deniers’ arguments: that they mistake abductive arguments—in which case verdicts function as premises that support a theoretical account—for arguments that support case verdicts.

I examine cases from two influential articles in which some of the first attempts to formulate different versions of luck egalitarianism were made: Ronald Dworkin’s “What Is Equality? Part 1” and Gerald A. Cohen’s “On the Currency of Egalitarian Justice.”7 I argue that a close examination of these articles indicates that their authors do treat intuitions as evidence. Both Dworkin and Cohen treat case verdicts as starting points for abductive arguments and use intuition-terminology (“intuition,” “intuitively,” and cognate terms) to express or to refer to these verdicts. I argue that the conjunction of these two observations constitutes positive evidence that they treat intuitions as evidence.

Cohen and Dworkin are viewed as being among the most influential thinkers in the literature on justice, and their discussion of expensive tastes is viewed as one of the most important debates in 1980s and 1990s political philosophy. Many regard them as two of the principal luck egalitarian thinkers.8 Due to their influence and importance, examining these articles is interesting in and of itself. Moreover, I think the current inquiry is of general interest. If centrality is false, we would not expect to find that intuitions figure as central evidence in influential contributions. Moreover, the issue Dworkin and Cohen raise and discuss in the articles I examine—the role of responsibility—pertains to distributive ideals in general.9 Finally, I think that Dworkin’s and Cohen’s articles are representative of a common style of argument. Their arguments seem to share a structure with a large range of arguments in political philosophy more generally. Thus, the articles seem representative of common methods of argumentation in political philosophy.10

I proceed as follows. First, I provide some clarifying remarks on centrality and intuitions. Second, I provide a brief overview of the debate and present Cappelen’s challenge to provide positive evidence for centrality. Third, I develop an analytical framework in response to the challenge. Fourth, I apply the framework in an analysis of Dworkin’s and Cohen’s articles. Finally, I briefly consider some objections to the analysis and conclude.

Considering that centrality is an overly general claim to examine in a single article, I derive a narrower hypothesis from it, but first I will clarify how intuitions are understood in this study.

Based on examinations of philosophical practice, and the method of cases in particular, it has been argued that case verdicts are not supported by appeals to intuition.18 Instead, philosophers support such verdicts by arguing for them. Thus, the assumption is that a verdict being argued for is a good indication that the verdict’s intuitiveness is not treated as evidence for the verdict. I refer to this position as the “argument view.”

A common reply to the argument view is that the idea that arguments support verdicts is compatible with the intuitiveness of the verdicts being treated as evidence. For example, the arguments’ role could be to shore up the intuition.19 Another common response is that the intuition deniers fail to see that some of the arguments they identify are actually abductive arguments with intuitions as starting points.20 Thus, support goes in the opposite direction to what the intuition deniers assume: that is, from case verdict to theoretical account. I will refer to the second response as the “explanation view.”

One problem with the first response is that it only establishes the possibility that intuitions are treated as evidence. However, more than that is needed to defend centrality, according to the intuition deniers. If a philosopher invokes arguments in defense of a case verdict, they claim, the verdict is supported regardless of whether its intuitiveness is treated as evidence. Thus, one needs positive evidence that the verdict’s intuitiveness is doing any work.21 I will refer to this challenge as “the positive-evidence challenge.”

The second response also falls short of the positive-evidence challenge, according to the intuition deniers. At best, those who have defended the explanation view would have showed that a given argument can also be interpreted as abductive. In that case, one should assume that the support goes in both directions and, thus, that the case verdict does not carry any independent evidential weight. Moreover, case verdicts are not necessarily treated as starting points for such inferences because they are intuitive.22

As the discussion above demonstrated, friends of centrality need to confront the positive-evidence challenge to sustain their responses to the intuition deniers’ argument. It is useful to think of the positive-evidence challenge in terms of two hurdles. First, we need to demonstrate that case verdicts are treated as evidence. Second, we need to demonstrate that they are treated as evidence because they are intuitive.

In their articles, Dworkin and Cohen articulate accounts of the political ideal of equality—equality of resources (ER) and equal access to advantage (EAA), respectively—that are commonly labeled luck egalitarian. ER holds that resources should be distributed equally, whereas EAA holds that access to advantage should be distributed equally. These accounts are developed in response to a third account of equality, equality of welfare (EW), which holds that the proper currency of egalitarian theories is welfare. What Dworkin and Cohen find unsatisfactory about EW is that it does not take into account an agent’s responsibility. This is something they try to remedy when formulating their own theories. Their discussions of expensive tastes are critical to their argument and I will focus on them here.

I start by outlining Dworkin’s and Cohen’s discussion of expensive tastes, particularly the Louis case, in some detail, italicizing parts of the quotes that are important for the discussion to follow. This is necessary to provide the reader with the relevant passages for interpreting the arguments. I then illustrate the difficulty in determining whether case verdicts are argued for or treated as starting points for abductive arguments, which stress the need for the analytical framework I developed above. I then use that framework to analyze the articles and test my hypothesis.

In this section, I consider some objections to the diagnostics that I have applied—that is, abduction and intuition-terminology.

In this article, I have investigated a hypothesis derived from centrality: intuitions served as central evidence when Dworkin and Cohen first articulated and debated luck egalitarianism. To do this, I developed an analytical framework that overcomes the positive-evidence challenge. I have argued that if case verdicts are treated as starting points for abductive arguments, it suggests that they are treated as evidence. Therefore, the framework offers diagnostics for identifying whether case verdicts are so treated. Moreover, I have argued that if case verdicts treated as starting points for abductive arguments are referred to using intuition-terminology, that gives us reason to believe that the case verdicts are treated as evidence because they are intuitive. When examining Dworkin’s and Cohen’s discussion of expensive tastes, case verdicts are treated as starting points for abductive arguments and referred to using intuition-terminology.

One particularly important lesson from this study is that we need to examine how a philosopher treats the case verdicts she reaches and how these relate to the various theoretical accounts under consideration in order to properly assess whether that philosopher is arguing for a case verdict or arguing abductively. I think that insufficient attention has been paid to this point in previous studies.

Abstract Image

直觉是否被视为证据?《政治哲学案例》*
因此,支持的方向与直觉否认者的假设相反:即从案件判决到理论解释。我将把第二种反应称为“解释观点”。第一种反应的一个问题是,它只确立了直觉被视为证据的可能性。然而,根据直觉否认者的说法,要捍卫中心性还需要更多的证据。他们声称,如果一个哲学家援引论证来为案件判决辩护,那么无论其直观性是否被视为证据,该判决都是得到支持的。因此,人们需要确凿的证据来证明判决的直观性正在起作用我将把这种挑战称为“积极证据挑战”。根据直觉否认者的说法,第二种回答也不符合正面证据的挑战。充其量,那些为解释观点辩护的人会表明,一个给定的论点也可以被解释为溯因性的。在这种情况下,人们应该假设支持是双向的,因此,案件判决不具有任何独立的证据分量。此外,案件判决不一定被视为这种推论的起点,因为它们是直观的。正如上面的讨论所表明的,中心性的朋友需要面对正面证据的挑战,以维持他们对直觉否认者论点的回应。从两个方面来考虑积极证据的挑战是有用的。首先,我们需要证明案件判决被视为证据。其次,我们需要证明它们被视为证据,因为它们是直观的。在他们的文章中,德沃金和科恩阐明了平等的政治理想——资源平等(ER)和优势平等(EAA)——这通常被称为运气平等主义。ER认为资源应该平均分配,而EAA认为优势的获取应该平均分配。这些解释是对第三种平等解释的回应,即福利平等(EW),它认为平等主义理论的适当货币是福利。德沃金和科恩不满意的地方在于,它没有考虑到代理人的责任。这是他们在制定自己的理论时试图弥补的。他们对昂贵品味的讨论对他们的论点至关重要,我将在这里重点讨论。我首先概述了德沃金和科恩对昂贵品味的讨论,尤其是路易斯一案,在一些细节上,我用斜体标出了对接下来的讨论很重要的引言部分。这是为读者提供解释论点的相关段落所必需的。然后,我说明了确定案件判决是否被论证或被视为溯因性论证的起点的困难,这强调了我在上面开发的分析框架的必要性。然后我用这个框架来分析文章并检验我的假设。在本节中,我将考虑对我所应用的诊断的一些反对意见——即溯因和直觉术语。在本文中,我研究了一个源自中心性的假设:当德沃金和科恩首次阐述和辩论运气平均主义时,直觉是核心证据。为了做到这一点,我开发了一个分析框架来克服正面证据的挑战。我认为,如果案件判决被视为诱拐论点的起点,这表明它们被视为证据。因此,该框架为确定案件判决是否得到如此处理提供了诊断方法。此外,我认为,如果案件判决被视为溯因论证的起点,使用直觉术语,这给了我们理由相信,案件判决被视为证据,因为它们是直觉的。在考察德沃金和科恩关于昂贵品味的讨论时,案件判决被视为溯因论证的起点,并使用直觉术语。从这项研究中得到的一个特别重要的教训是,我们需要检查哲学家是如何对待她得出的案件判决的,以及这些判决如何与所考虑的各种理论描述联系起来,以便正确评估该哲学家是在为案件判决辩护,还是在进行绑架性辩论。我认为在以往的研究中对这一点重视不够。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
5.60%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: The Journal of Political Philosophy is an international journal devoted to the study of theoretical issues arising out of moral, legal and political life. It welcomes, and hopes to foster, work cutting across a variety of disciplinary concerns, among them philosophy, sociology, history, economics and political science. The journal encourages new approaches, including (but not limited to): feminism; environmentalism; critical theory, post-modernism and analytical Marxism; social and public choice theory; law and economics, critical legal studies and critical race studies; and game theoretic, socio-biological and anthropological approaches to politics. It also welcomes work in the history of political thought which builds to a larger philosophical point and work in the philosophy of the social sciences and applied ethics with broader political implications. Featuring a distinguished editorial board from major centres of thought from around the globe, the journal draws equally upon the work of non-philosophers and philosophers and provides a forum of debate between disparate factions who usually keep to their own separate journals.
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