Models of philosophical thought experimentation
Abstract
The practice of thought experimentation plays a central role in contemporary philosophical
methodology. Many philosophers rely on thought experimentation as their
primary and even sole procedure for testing theories about the natures of properties
and relations. This test procedure involves entertaining hypothetical cases in imaginative
thought and then undergoing intuitions about the distribution of properties and
relations in them. A theory’s comporting with an intuition is treated as evidence in
favour of it; but a clash is treated as evidence against the theory and may even be regarded
as falsifying it. The epistemic power of thought experimentation is mysterious. How can experiments
carried out within the mind enable us to discover truths about the natures of
properties and relations like knowledge, causation, personal identity, reference,
meaning, consciousness, beauty, justice, morality, and free will? This epistemological
challenge is urgent, but a model of philosophical thought experimentation would
seem to be a necessary propaedeutic to any serious discussion of it. An adequate
model would make the relevant test procedure explicit, thereby assisting in the identification
of points of potential epistemic vulnerability.
In this monograph I advance the propaedeutical model-building work already
done by Timothy Williamson, Anna-Sara Malmgren, and Jonathan Ichikawa and
Benjamin Jarvis. Following the lead of these philosophers, I focus on a single Gettier-
style thought experiment and the problem of identifying the real content of the
Gettier intuition. My first contribution is to establish the inadequacy of all of the existing
models. Each of them, I argue, fails to solve the content problem. It emerges
from my discussion, however, that Ichikawa and Jarvis’s truth in fiction approach
holds out the prospect of a solution.
My second contribution is to develop and defend a new way of implementing
the general idea behind the truth in fiction approach. The model I put forward does a
better overall job of modelling Gettier-style thought experiments than any of the existing
models. It has none of the defects which render those models inadequate and I
am unable to find any major defects peculiar to it. This should make us feel confident
that my model is adequate. Moreover, since the Gettier-style thought experiment
I focus on is paradigmatic, we should also feel confident that my model will generalise
naturally to other philosophical thought experiments.
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