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By Massimo Pigliucci | September 10th 2009 02:50 PM | 7 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Massimo Pigliucci

Massimo Pigliucci is Professor in the Departments of Ecology & Evolution and of Philosophy at Stony Brook University, NY.

His research is on the evolution of genotype-environment interactions


... Full Bio

The other day I went to a talk about the fall and revival of metaphysics, given by Sebastian Kolodziejczyk at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Metaphysics these days has a bad reputation, even among philosophers, so I was aware of its 'fall' but I was rather curious about the possibility of a 'revival'.

I came out of the lecture without much conviction that the 21st century is going to see anything like a resurrection of metaphysics.

Metaphysics, of course, is that classical branch of philosophy that deals with the fundamental nature of the world. Or is it? That was what Kolodziejczyk called “the Aristotelian model,” where philosophers who engage in metaphysics ask questions about the nature of space, time, causality and so on. It is an honorable tradition, of course, but it has ceded most of its terrain to fundamental physics.

These days those philosophers who have something to say about such issues are likely to be philosophers of science or mathematics working in fields such as quantum mechanics or string theory. Saying that “water is the principle of all things,” as Thales of Miletus (ca. 624 BC–ca. 546 BC) used to do, just doesn’t cut it anymore.

After Aristotle, for a long time metaphysics was taken over by theological considerations, from the Scholastics to Hegel, and it became increasingly esoteric, self-contained, and at every iteration, inching closer and closer to complete absurdity. The Monadology (1714) by Gottfried Leibniz was one of the last pre-physics attempts to account for fundamental aspects of reality by simply thinking about it, but again to say that monads are a basic unit of perceptual reality is to assert something rather obscure without a shred of evidence, and moreover something that has been superseded by much clearer and more evidence-based accounts provided by modern science.

And let us not even get started with all the metaphysical fluff about the existence of God, of course (if someone mention’s the ontological argument I will reach for my metaphorical gun!).

It was within this context that the 20th century saw the famous (or infamous, depending on who you ask) critique of metaphysics by the logical positivists, whose position was that metaphysical concepts — in philosophical parlance — have no referent. In lay terms, metaphysicians talk literally about nothing, and therefore do not and cannot make any sense. These days it isn’t polite in philosophical circles to show much sympathy for the neo-positivists, but I must admit that as far as certain kinds of metaphysics are concerned, it seems to me that they got it largely right.

How, then, do we save metaphysics? Well, how about by simply redefining it? One of Kolodziejczyk’s major points was that there are other, radically different, ways of conceiving of what metaphysics is. For instance, for philosophers like Wittgenstein and Derrida (!!) metaphysics is an exploration of concepts, while for people like Heidegger (again, !!) it is about our experience.

There are two problems with this approach: first, it is not at all clear what these new ways of understanding metaphysics have to do with, well, metaphysics.  Wouldn’t it then be more honest to say that (classical, Aristotelian) metaphysics has run its course, it has achieved what it could achieve, and has now receded into the background and left the initiative to physics? Secondly, exploring the meaning and structure of concepts smells a lot like philosophy of language, if not like linguistics itself, and investigating phenomenological experience quickly leads to psychology and cognitive science. Where’s the metaphysics?

If philosophers insist in saying things like “persistence is the only unchangeable reality” (quoted in the handout from Kolodziejczyk’s lecture) one is perfectly within their rights to ask what the devil does “persistence” mean in this context, and what exactly is the meaning of saying that it is the only unchangeable reality? This is the sort of fluff that gives all of philosophy a bad name, but that ought to be confined to only a sub-group of misguided philosophers who mistake obscurity for profundity.

We finally come to Kolodziejczyk’s own proposal, which was better — in my opinion — than Heidegger’s (then again, almost anything is), and yet somehow not exactly the harbinger of a new revolution in metaphysics. Kolodziejczyk’s idea is that metaphysics is the “analysis, description, and explanation” of what he calls “basic metaphysical beliefs.” Such as? His examples include “things surrounding us exist,” “things we are talking about are distinct in space and time,” “[things] are similar in many ways,” and so on.

Well, maybe there is some analysis to be done of such simple concepts, though it is hard to imagine that a very thick book will ever be written about these matters. But as for a satisfactory description and explanation of our basic beliefs about the world, it seems to me that they are much more likely to come from, respectively, the cognitive sciences and evolutionary biology than philosophy.

Moreover, as someone pointed out in the Q&A following the lecture, we know now (thanks to fundamental physics) that a lot of our folk metaphysics is, in fact, wrong, which is not surprising considering that we have evolved as macroscopic animals needing to be equipped with ways to handle those aspects of the world pertinent to our survival and reproduction — aspects that don’t include an understanding of quantum mechanics or string theory.

What, then, is metaphysics good for? Other than its (invaluable, I think) historical contribution to human thought, there are two things that modern metaphysics can do for us: on the one hand, aspects of it can serve as good models for a fruitful relationship between philosophy and science (think of attempts at understanding the nature of time and space, for instance); on the other hand, it is a constant reminder that even science can get started only on premises that cannot be justified empirically within science itself (think of causality, or reality).

But, please, no more nonsense about unchangeable persistence.

Comments

Maktub's picture
I like this article because this issue challenges me. There are a lot of international relations (IR) theorists who think that none of the philosophies driving IR have changed since the classical philosophies of Greece, India, and China. I am quite reluctant to agree with them.  I think these philosophies are evolving, and I assume that language and communication technology, or technology in general, has something to do with this evolution.... I appreciate your post.

kerrjac's picture
Great article&nice conclusions.

Alex recently had a great article on what he called the Petabyte Problem (http://www.scientificblogging.com/daytime_astronomer/petabyte_problem) where he discussed how astronomers are baffled at what to with the petabytes of satellite space data coming their way. Metaphysics may be dismissed as esoteric and useless, but just as useless is its extreme opposite, collecting tons of data merely for the sake of collecting tons of data.

Monads and unchangeable persistence seems to describe the world fairly well in comparison to petabytes of unorganized "data" from space - along with its accompanying debate over how to best store all that data for someone to crawl through.
it is a constant reminder that even science can get started only on
premises that cannot be justified empirically within science itself

I agree completely. As technology and the speed of communication progresses, more attention is going to be paid to its underlying organization. See for example this great Atlantic article about The Economist (http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200907/news-magazines), praising the magazine for its focus on quality and analysis over breaking news and journalistic scoops.

There are many legit research questions that can't be answered with the current state of empirical science. This spurs technological innovation, new stat models, etc, but it also forces us to confront basic assumptions, such as the limits of analysis, and the sorts of questions that can be answered and those that can't.

Hank's picture
 See for example this great Atlantic article about The Economist (http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200907/news-magazines), praising the magazine for its focus on quality and analysis over breaking news and journalistic scoops.

I have said numerous times that if we have a model we want to aspire toward in the future, it wouldn't be something like Scientific American, it would be The Economist.    We have talked with them about doing something together but they may be the most tightly edited publication in the world, so their business people love us but their editors run the show and editors are not huge fans of unedited stuff, no matter who writes it.   Thus it may never happen.  We'll see.

They can make art in 200 words - not everyone can do that because journalists want their personalities to be bigger than their work (the legacy of Walter Cronkite) but at a place like The Economist, where they are anonymous, they get to focus on precision and clarity.

kerrjac's picture
I've long thought that an Economist-styled science magazine would hit the spot like an ice-cold bottle of Coca-Cola in the desert. The problem with current science journalism is that it's never properly synthesized - they're always trying to blow your mind, or dig into the quirky personalities of science (as if they were celebrities) or something. I don't want science fluff. I just want it to be given to me straight. Tell me about the state of molecular biology - the ongiong themes, recent history, tensions, and potential directions - just like The Economist's weekly section about Asia tells me about Asia, and gives me an opinionated but informed heads-up about what's going on there. Simplify it but don't pretend it's something that it's not. Tell me what I need to know, and nothing more. Focus on quality and organization of information, not quantity. I've long thought that if I were entrepreneur or ever can become one, this would be an awesome project.

each and every one of us have (at least implicitly) metaphysics in his thoughts and acts? I know I do and when they are not at order, I feel sick. Isn't it that order that we constantly have dialog about, if at least there is no dogma preventing it? Isn't that why we hate government pretending to know what we don't?

Doesn't ~

Considering that Alchemy led to chemistry and Metaphysics led to Physics, people who support any type of evolution should consider the progression a natural one and the reverse direction unnatural.

That doesn't mean the old words will be wiped out and forgotten. It means the new words must be fit enough to survive any resurgence of the old order.

Resurgence in Metaphysics is a message to the physics community that it lacks something and people will look elsewhere until the deficiency is filled.

Alchemy is not having a resurgence, although carbon is being turned into diamonds, it is done inside the Chemical community.

I personally don't find enough deficiency in Physics to justify a return to Metaphysics, for any of the topics that are proposed for it. Nor would I expect you with 3 PhD degrees to find need of Metaphysics to describe the physical world.

The problem with physics is that it has become detached from the community it resides in, by the tools of mathematics that are beyond the grasp of most people.

In reading through the different publications there is really no question in Metaphysics that cannot be inferred as a future experiment in some branch of the Physical science.

Physics does not do a good job of giving explanations to the general public. The best effort in recent times was made by Roger Penrose, who actually defined the terms he was using, and developed all of the mathematical methods that were required. The result was a monumental work 1045 pages of difficult mathematics that almost anyone could eventually work through to get an understanding of the topics.

Then in the last few pages of non technical summaries, Penrose left an impression that the main stream of Physics had become lost in the mathematics and deficiencies of mathematics, such that the next big advancement in understanding the underlying physical realities would probably come from some obscure unexpected source.

Then it should not be too surprising if some people have placed their bets on Metaphysics as the logical survivor in a struggle of evolution.

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