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January 08, 2004
I feel; therefore I am conservative?
You don't feel. Therefore you are a liberal! The following turnaround in logic has to be the most novel definition of conservatism and liberalism I have seen -- reaching new heights in twisted thinking: This attitude toward belief -- that one should believe a proposition only if one has articulable reasons for it -- represents liberalism in the epistemic realm. The contrast is epistemic conservatism, which holds that belief -- in God, in the importance of marriage, in the value of tradition -- needs no defense. To a conservative, beliefs are presumed innocent until proven guilty. To a liberal, they are presumed guilty until proven innocent. The liberal epistemic standard begs the question against political conservatism, just as a conservative epistemic standard would beg the question against political liberalism. Conservatives must not fall for the liberal trick of making nonbelief the default position. (Via InstaPundit.)When I first read the above, it struck me as an outright attack on logic itself, for it contains so many unsupported premises as to appear ridiculous on its face. Without any support other than his blanket statement, the writer seems to equate emotion with conservatism, reason with liberalism, then pronounces the absence of reason correct -- in the process implicitly urging upon those he calls "conservatives" the apparent virtue of the unexamined life! But then I learned that the author is a professor of logic. This worried me, for I don't like to be fooled. Something had to be wrong. In the above, Professor Burgess-Jackson's original Tech Central Station post was itself fisked by another TCS writer, Kenneth Silber, who found inconsistencies such as this: Earlier you advocated conservatism by writing "It is never too late to let the heart be ruled by the brain." Now, you seem to be dismissing the brain. Isn't it the brain, rather than the heart, that tries to have articulated reasons for belief? Isn't it important that exponents of a political philosophy try to have reasons and arguments, rather than just state their beliefs as dogma? Besides, liberals with unexamined beliefs and unsupported assumptions do not seem all that rare.Interesting. How are we to reconcile such statements? Let's look at the logical conflicts: 1. Liberals are wrong for questioning (rational) instead of believing (emotional).You've gotta just love the purity of such an ideologue! But of course, he's off the hook because of his claim that any attempt at making him explain or justify his "beliefs" is a "liberal trick." I am aghast. But I still think someone (liberal or otherwise) is playing tricks on me. This reminds me of the pro-drug people who will jump up and down in praise of ever-more-draconian drug laws no matter what happens: 1. If drug use goes up, it means the laws aren't working and we therefore need more laws and more enforcement.And of course, if you feel that way, you need not defend your position! Those who criticize you are guilty of logic and reason! You are superior, because you possess the most powerful beliefs of all: unexamined beliefs! (Unexamined beliefs, like unstated, concealed, hidden, or forbidden arguments, are in my view very dangerous, especially if people are encouraged not to examine them.) But there is more. Not completely trusting Burgess-Jackson, I poked around and found this definition of epistemic conservatism as: the concept that new theories or models are treated with skepticism until they are proven to be valid and useful.Fair enough. First in time wins until disproven? (Paganism beats Islam?) I might even be an epistemic conservative myself by that definition. But the idea that one's premises and beliefs need not be examined -- sorry, but that goes against my grain, and against everything I have ever been taught. PARENTHETICAL NOTE: I am NOT attempting to confuse epistemic conservatism with the crude logical error of "older is better". [ED. NOTE: "Older is better" is a topic I have discussed before in this blog.] Then I found this: For a theist, the belief that God exists is deeply entrenched, probably more than any other belief. If it turns out to be incompatible with some other, less-entrenched belief, the theist, if rational, will abandon that other belief. Entrenchment, however, is a matter of degree. Even though the logical tension can be resolved by abandoning belief in God, it won't be, it needn't be, and arguably it shouldn't be. We might think of this as epistemic conservatism, for it cautions us to give up as little as possible to maintain overall coherence (i.e., to "conserve" our beliefs). (I leave it to you to describe epistemic liberalism [reform of belief] and radicalism [revolutionary change in belief]. Different people have different epistemic principles.)Well, OK. So now the question is one of ideological "entrenchment." That sounds more like a philosphical popularity contest than logic. Whose god wins the epistemic conservative award is based on whose god has the most followers? That scares me. However, Professor Burgess-Jackson has another test: which audience is listening to the argument. If effective argumentation is necessarily ad hominem in nature, then evaluation of an argument must attend to its audience. Let me illustrate this with an historical example. The French mathematician/philosopher Blaise Pascal (1623-1662) argued that it is in one's interest to believe in ("wager for") the Christian god. One of his premises implies that there are just two possibilities: Either the Christian god exists or no god exists. Some critics have charged that no self-respecting atheist or agnostic would accept this premise, for obviously there are other logical possibilities: a nonChristian god, for example, or many gods.I am not at all satisfied with winning an argument because of its "effectiveness." If the argument is logically invalid (which the above choice -- Christian god or no god-- is), then it makes no difference how many people buy it. Obviously, Burgess-Jackson feels otherwise. Well, I suppose you could say that either Burgess-Jackson is right about logic or else there is no logic. I'll close with this logical classic: Every decision you make, including what to eat, has costs and consequences. If you eat the flesh of an animal, then you are responsible not just for its death but for how it was made to live. That you yourself didn't do the killing is irrelevant, although it has the convenient effect of hiding the awful costs of your action from you. If you aren't prepared to raise and kill a turkey, don't eat one. It's that simple.It is? Much as I like it when things are made simple, if I didn't know Burgess-Jackson was a Bush supporter, I'd positively swear he was slamming him for the Iraqi "Christmas turkey" incident. But let's stick with logic, folks; the fact that he supports the president must mean that he believes that Bush was serving plastic turkey, and thus, no harm was done! Case closed.
I find it altogether amazing that this writer actually teaches subjects such as logic and ethics. Allow me to translate that last paragraph in terms of what it actually means: "liberalism in the epistemic realm" means that one must have evidence for a proposition before one is prepared to accept it as true. "Epistemic conservatism," on the other hand, means that one can believe absolutely anything -- so long as it is sanctioned by "tradition" -- and nothing needs any "defense," that is, nothing requires any reasons to support it whatsoever. If a society has engaged in a practice long enough or believed certain notions, no matter how nonsensical, for a sufficient length of time, that is defense enough.Arthur does a much better job of fisking him than I did (even if I don't entirely agree with all of Arthur's points), so please read his entire post. UPDATE: Try as I might to give Professor Burgess-Jackson every benefit of the doubt, I think that his post -- driving a wedge between conservatism and logic -- is bad news. For conservatism and logic. And I'm more confused than ever before about what is a conservative? posted by Eric on 01.08.04 at 05:41 PM
Comments
Jesus frigging x, this is the second techcentralstation post I've responded to in about 30 minutes. Look, guy, let's get something straight. James Glassman established techcentralstation as a lobbying operation. A new gig, after his thoroughly ridiculous book Dow 36000 seduced more than a few buyers to buy it http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2003/0312.confessore.html Anything there has to be read in light of that. One might seriously ask which of his lobbying clients this ridiculous article is supposed to service. As far as I'm concerned, Glassman is just another huckster, another snake oil salesman. As are his operations. Don't believe what you read over the internet, just because it's there raj · January 9, 2004 05:16 AM Raj, Whether I succeeded in my post or not, I was trying to focus on what Burgess-Jackson said, not the opinions of his publisher (whatever they may be). If the publisher (this "huckster" Glassman) hired you to write a column, would that make your opinions wrong? And if I believed what I read on the Internet "just because it's there" I wouldn't have started a blog. Eric Scheie · January 10, 2004 12:16 AM |
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This kind of spectrumology is just excruciatingly fascinating to me. I have very often thought that an ideological spectrum could be divided fourfold thusly: Left-brained Left-wingers, Right-brained Left-Wingers, Left-brained Right-wingers, Right-brained Right-wingers.
I'm one of the Right-brained [Romantic, Nietzschean] Right-wingers, or an "epistemic conservative". Paganism beats Islam. Homosexuality must be conserved because it is beautiful.