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Philosophical skepticism (UK spelling, scepticism) is the philosophical school of thought in which one critically examines whether the knowledge and perceptions one has are true, and whether or not one can
ever be said to have true knowledge.
This article does not deal with scientific skepticism,
which is a practical position in which one does not accept the veracity of claims until solid evidence is produced in accordance
with the scientific method. For the sake of brevity, skepticism in the remainder of this article refers exclusively to
philosophical skepticism.
History of skepticism
In the ancient west
The Western tradition of systematic skepticism goes back at least
as far as Pyrrho of Elis. His adult life saw the
conquest of his native Greece by Alexander the Great, whom he accompanied eastward as far as India, where he encountered non-Hellenic philosophy. He had originally espoused Stoicism but was troubled by the disputes that could be found against his own philosophy and within all
philosophical schools of his day, including his own. According to a later account of his life, he became overwhelmed by his
inability to determine rationally which school was correct. Upon admitting this to himself, he finally achieved the inner peace
that he had been seeking.
Ironically, from a Stoic point of view, Pyrrho found peace by admitting to ignorance and seeming to abandon reason. However,
this was not the ignorance of children or farm animals: it was a knowledgeable ignorance, arrived at through the
application of reason. As one of their tools, Pyrrhonists made useful distinctions between "being" and "appearing" and between
the identity and the sensing of a phenomenon.
Pyrrho and his school were not actually "skeptics" in the later sense of the word. They had the goal of
αταραξια (ataraxia -
peace of mind); once they achieved this, inquiry would halt. For them, it sufficed to know that one did not know. It would have
upset this peace of mind to wonder whether or not there was anything at all to know, or, even worse, to search in case something
not yet considered could be known. Later thinkers took up Pyrrho's path and extended it into fully-fledged skepticism.
In the ancient east
Buddhism offers a wellspring of skepticism that is little known in much of the
West. However, it differs substantially from western philosophical skepticism in several ways:
- Buddha touched the earth on the point of his enlightenment. He did so in order to
use the earth as witness to his enlightenment. In this way, Buddhism does not claim that we don't have knowledge, and it doesn't
claim that we can't have knowledge.
- Buddhism places less emphasis on truth and knowledge than western philosophical skepticism, and more emphasis on enlightenment as a goal. ("Enlightenment" is a buddhist
technical term, and does not equate to truth and knowledge).
- However, Buddhism (certainly in its manifestation of Nagarjuna's texts that
form the core of Madhyamaka) does say that truth and existence exist solely
within the conventions (or contexts) that assert them to exist. This does not mean that collaborative games (such as scientific
contributions to technology) do not have pay-offs, but just that they are no more or less inherently true than the views
and ideas of (for example) the Azande, who are known for their Magical thinking.
Schools of philosophical skepticism
First, philosophical skepticism can be either the claim that we don't have knowledge, or that we can't have
knowledge. There's a difference -- the second makes a stronger claim, and one harder to prove. It is one thing to say that we
could, but unfortunately don't, have knowledge. It could be argued that Socrates held that view. He basically seemed to think that if we continue to ask questions we might eventually
come to have knowledge; but that we didn't have it yet, at least not back in ancient Greece.
It's quite a different thing to say that we couldn't ever possibly have knowledge -- to say that knowledge is
impossible. This has probably been a more common opinion among skeptics. They really did, and a very few still do, think that we
just cannot know anything. This is the variety we'll be investigating in a little bit.
Now remember that skepticism can be either about everything, or about some particular area. If a skeptic
believes that knowledge of anything at all is impossible, then his or her view is global skepticism. Whatever in the
world you pick, the global skeptic will say that you can't possibly, or at least don't, know it. In the history of philosophy,
very few global skeptics have existed. Hardly anybody has been that bold. Global skepticism really is bold --
because it denies so much: that you know your own name; that you know that you have a mind, or a body; that you know you have
been alive for longer than ten minutes; and so forth. Arguments for global skepticism will tend to have great difficulty in
supporting their extremely strong claim, at least of the variety that says: "We cannot know anything at all." The weaker
versions, that say, "We do not know anything at all", could perhaps have stronger support. But this article does not
address that claim.
If one denies that we do or can have knowledge of a particular area, then that view is local skepticism. And one can
say that one is a skeptic about the area that one has doubts about. Of course different kinds of local skepticism
emerge, depending on the area. Areas like: the external world; other minds; the past and the future; and so forth. Take for
example the external world. If a person says that no one can know anything about the external world, the world that exists apart
from their own mind, then they are a local skeptic, and they espouse skepticism about the external world. Or even more
briefly, external world skepticism.
To summarise this introductory material about skepticism, skepticism is the view that either we do not have any
knowledge, or that we cannot have any propositional knowledge -- knowledge either about anything, or about
some particular area. This article primarily deals with the sort of skepticism that claims we cannot have
propositional knowledge. Skepticism about everything is global skepticism. Instead this article addresses some different
kinds of local skepticism. So this article primarily focusses on looking at some skepticisms that say that one
cannot have knowledge about some particular area, X, or Y, or Z. (What X, Y, and Z might be is explained below.)
Epistemology & skepticism
Epistemology asks the question "Is knowledge possible?" This can be
rephrased by asking "Is one ever sufficiently justified in believing something in order to have knowledge?" The skeptic's answer
is "No." So the skeptic says one is never sufficiently justified in believing something in order to have knowledge of it.
(There seems to be a paradox here. How can a skeptic claim to know the answer to the question of whether
knowledge is possible or not? This claim internally defeats the position of the skeptic!)
However, this is a very vague skepticism. So more precisely we'll say the skeptic claims:
We can never be justified in believing something about area X, or at least not enough to give us knowledge
about that area. These areas could be, for example, the external world; other minds; the past and the future; and so forth.
At this point it may help to look the epistemic theory of foundationalism. Foundationalism states that there have to be some basic beliefs; and basic beliefs
are beliefs that are justified, but not justified by other beliefs. What then could justify basic beliefs? One could
say: mental events, like an instance of perception, or an instance of
memory.
Let us put that point in a more concrete way. Say you're looking across a field of daisies and you see a cow. So you believe
there is a cow across the field of daisies. And surely this belief is justified. How is it justified? What justifies the belief?
Why, the mere fact that you see the cow. Or more technically: the event of your seeing the cow justifies your belief that the cow
is there peacefully grazing on daisies.
This is an important point to understand so let us look at a second example. Suppose you are reminiscing about your high
school days and you vividly recall a very nasty gym teacher -- very loud and rude. So you believe that you had a nasty gym
teacher; and again this belief is justified. How? By the fact that you remember it. That's all. Again, more technically: it is
the event of your remembering your nasty gym teacher that justifies your belief that you had that teacher.
This is all actually very straightforward, once you understand what's being said. If we assume that foundationalism is true,
then we have basic beliefs; and our basic beliefs, to be basic, have to be justified by something that isn't a belief; so what
justifies them? The operation of ordinary cognitive processes, such as seeing, remembering, feeling, introspecting, and so forth.
When you remember something, that gives you excellent reason to believe what you remember. Not always of course, but usually,
especially if the memory is vivid and you can't think of any reason to believe that this particular memory is wrong.
But in any case, if you do get justified beliefs from the use of memory, then your memory has to be reliable. Similarly with
perception: if your seeming to see something makes you justified in believing it's there, then you have to assume that perception
is reliable. If it were unreliable -- if it were often giving you false information -- then you couldn't say you were justified
just based on the use of perception.
Recall that local skepticism is skepticism about particular areas. These particular areas match up fairly closely
with different cognitive processes. What the skeptic doubts is that our cognitive processes are reliable. The skeptic says, for
example: perception is not reliable (or may be unreliable); therefore, you are not justified in your beliefs about what
you perceive.
Since what you perceive is the external world, this sort of skeptic says: you are not justified in your beliefs about the
external world. So one kind of skepticism is called external world skepticism: that is the view that we cannot know
anything about an external world, even that such an external world exists! The reason we can't is that our faculty of perception
is not reliable.
(There seems to be another paradox here. It appears that external world skepticism does know that there
is externally an external/internal dualism!)
Motivations for external world skepticism
You might wonder why anyone would want to question the reliability of perception. David Hume offers one argument in this respect. Hume's argument basically says that we can't know anything about
the external world, because to know that we would have to know that there is a connection between our sense-data and the external
world that they are supposed to represent. But the only thing we have contact with are our sense-data; we can never know anything
in the external world except by first knowing our sense-data. But then we have no way to prove the connection between our
sense-data and the external world. So we have no way to prove that our sense-data do represent any external world -- and
that is to say that we have no way to prove that perception is reliable.
In addition to Hume's argument for external world skepticism, there is another more famous argument. This is Descartes' famous dreaming doubt, and it goes like
this: Descartes was writing one evening in his room, and he thought to himself (paraphrasing very loosely): What if I am asleep
in bed right now, and only dreaming that I am awake, and writing? Isn't
that at least possible? Then he said, well surely, I can tell when I am awake and when I am asleep. I can tell the difference
between wakefulness and a dream. All sorts of strange things happen in dreams; I pass unaccountably from scene to scene when I'm
dreaming; I don't have any long memory of what happened in a day, when I'm dreaming; and so forth. Then Descartes said: Haven't I
had those very thoughts in some of my dreams? Sometimes, when I was dreaming, I was convinced that I was awake! I even tried to
test that I was awake, when I was dreaming, and the tests convinced me that I was awake! But I was wrong; I was
dreaming. Isn't it quite possible that the same thing is happening to me right now? Isn't it possible that I am dreaming
that I can test whether I'm awake or asleep -- and of course, in my dream, I pass the test? So it seems really vivid to me right
now that I'm awake -- but in fact, I'm asleep?
Well, Descartes said to himself, I guess there aren't any definite signs, or tests, that I could use to tell whether
I'm asleep or dreaming. I could, after all, be dreaming those very tests. I have experience of doing that, thinking that I passed
the test for being awake, when really I was only dreaming. So there isn't any way to tell that I am awake now. I cannot
possibly prove that I am awake. So, Descartes said to himself, I don't really know that I am awake now and writing in the
evening. For all I really know, I could be asleep. That's Descartes' dreaming doubt.
Now we can go on and examine this argument in more detail. For one thing, why does Descartes think that he doesn't know he's
awake and writing? Well, he might be asleep. But what difference does that make? The difference that it makes is that his
faculty of sense-perception would not be reliable if he were asleep. In other words, if he were asleep, it would
seem to him that he is seeing, feeling, and hearing various things; but he wouldn't really be. In that case, of course, his
faculty of perception wouldn't be reliable. But Descartes appears to go further than that: he appears to be saying that
since he might be dreaming, since he can't rule out the hypothesis that he is dreaming right now, that also means that
his faculty of perception is not reliable.
To many people, Descartes' position may seem absurd. Most people simply feel that of course they can tell that they're not
dreaming. Here, though, Descartes' could reply that maybe you can, but maybe you're just dreaming that you can
tell the difference. If you say you can tell the difference between being awake and being asleep, then you are assuming
that you're awake, in which case you're begging the
question against the skeptic.
Another common sense sort of response to Descartes' argument is that one
can tell that one's sense-perception is reliable, and here's how: When one sees something, like that cow chewing on daisies,
one can go over to the cow, touch it, hear it, lean on it, and so forth. That confirms that one really is seeing the cow. In the
same way, when one hears something, like a marching band outside, one can step outside, and look at the marching band, talk to
the members of the band, and so forth. That confirms that one heard the band outside. Throughout a person's life they've had so
many experiences like this that they are practically certain that, in the more obvious cases anyway, their faculty of perception
works -- it's generally reliable.
Descartes' skeptic will reply to this in much the same way as the previous objection: You might just be dreaming that
you are touching, hearing, and leaning on the cow. That marching band might just be part of a dream. For that matter you might
only be dreaming that your faculty of perception has been generally reliable. If you argue you're not dreaming as your
faculty of perception is reliable, then you are once again begging the question. First, you must establish that you're not
dreaming, and that's impossible. Thus, you can't know that your faculty of perception is reliable.
Additionally, a sharper skeptic might make another remark about seeing the cow and hearing the marching band. Because, after
all, weren't you using sense-perception in order to try to argue that your faculty of perception is generally reliable?
Think about that: in order to show that your sense of sight works, you use your sense of sight and other senses; in order to show
that your sense of hearing works, you use your sense of hearing and other senses. And it's not like you can avoid that. It would
be really bizarre (though some philosophers have actually tried it) to try to argue that your senses are reliable, without making
use of your senses. But if you make use of your senses, you are begging the question again. You have to assume, or presuppose,
that your senses are generally shipshape before you start using them to prove anything, including whether your senses
are generally shipshape.
How can you prove that perception is reliable without using your senses? That seems impossible. But how can you use
senses without assuming that perception is reliable? If you do that then you're arguing in a circle, you're begging the question.
So what's the upshot? That you can't prove that perception is reliable. If you try, you beg the question, and
question-begging is a logical fallacy.
Notice that this is actually a third skeptical argument, distinct from Hume's and Descartes', although it is related
to both. Hume said you can't prove that your sense-data represent the external world; Descartes said that you can't even prove
that you're not dreaming; and this third argument says that you can't prove that perception is reliable without assuming that
your senses are reliable and thereby begging the question at issue.
This third argument is also very serious because it can be used to generate skepticism about other cognitive processes, such
as memory. Do you think it would be possible to prove that your faculty of memory is reliable? Well, how would you do it? Could
you even possibly do it without relying on any memories at all? Because if you do rely on any memories, then
you're assuming that those memories are reliable: and that's what you're trying to prove, so you can't assume that. But how could
you possibly show that your memories really do represent the past, just by the use of your other cognitive processes,
such as perception, introspection, and so forth? It seems that you couldn't prove that. Not without begging the
question.
Objections to philosophical scepticism
First of all, in all three arguments -- Hume's, Descartes', and the circularity argument -- the claim is made that we
can't prove something or other. We can't prove that sense-data represent an external reality. We can't prove
that we're not dreaming. We can't prove that perception, or memory, is reliable. But now ask yourself: just because you can prove
something, does that mean that you don't know it? Or that you aren't justified in believing it? Take Descartes' dreaming
doubt as an example. Suppose you're convinced that you can't prove that you're not dreaming, not without begging the question.
And you're even willing to admit that mere very slight possibility that you are dreaming right now.
However, a non-scepticist might reply, who cares? So what if I can't prove, to Descartes' skeptic, that I'm not dreaming? Who
cares if there is a very, very slight possibility that I'm dreaming right now? Does that really matter to my
knowledge-claims?
Now, Descartes himself thought it definitely did matter. Descartes wanted absolutely certain knowledge --
knowledge beyond any doubt. And so he thought that if you can raise the smallest doubt about something, then you don't really
know it. For example, the dreaming doubt raises the very small possibility that you are not actually reading this article right
now; you might be dreaming; and so Descartes would say (at that point -- later he thought he refuted this skepticism)
that you don't know you're reading this right now.
So this forces us to ask ourselves: Do we have to have absolute certainty, lacking any doubt whatsoever, in
order to have knowledge? That would be the absolutely strongest grade of justification possible. And then we would be saying that
knowledge is not just sufficiently justified true belief, but certainly true belief.
Many philosophers don't think that such a strong degree of justification is necessary for knowledge. After all, they claim, we
can know what the weather is going to be like, just by reading the morning forecast. Sometimes we're wrong; but if we're right
then we have knowledge. So they are not particularly worried if they can't prove that they're not dreaming. They think it's
extremely unlikely that they're dreaming, and they think they're perfectly well justified in thinking they're awake. And they
don't have to know with absolute certainty that they're awake, of course, to be
well-justified in believing they're awake.
Note too that Descartes himself rejected his skeptical doubts in the end. But he thought he could prove that his life
is not just a long dream. His procedure was first to prove that God exists, and then to say:
well, God is not a deceiver, he is a good God. So he wouldn't allow the possibility that I'm asleep when by every indication I'm
awake. And besides, he gave me a faculty of sense-perception, and certainly God wouldn't make this faculty so faulty
that it is unreliable. So my faculty of sense-perception is reliable. So Descartes made God the guarantee of his being awake, and
of the reliability of his cognitive processes.
Of course, a lot of people have disagreed with Descartes on these points, for reasons not covered in this article. Here's a
second thing you might observe about skepticism: if the skeptic makes absolute certainty a requirement for knowledge, then you
could reply that this observation should be applied to skepticism itself. Is skepticism itself entirely beyond doubt? Isn't it
possible to raise various kinds of objection to skepticism? So it would appear; but then no one can know that skepticism
is true. So then the skeptic can't know that skepticism is true. But this is actually a bit of a weak reply, because it doesn't
really refute skepticism. The skeptic, after all, may be perfectly happy to admit that no one knows that skepticism is
true. The skeptic might rest content saying that skepticism is very probably true. That's not the kind of claim that
most non-skeptics will be happy to allow.
A third objection, which especially applies to the circularity argument, comes from the common-sense Scotsman, Thomas Reid. Reid argued as follows. Suppose the skeptic is right, and perception is
not reliable. But perception is just another one of my cognitive processes; and if it is not reliable then my
others are also bound not to be reliable. All of my faculties came out of the same shop, he said; so if one is faulty
the others are bound to be as well. But that means that the faculty of reasoning, which the skeptic uses, is also bound
to be unreliable too. In other words, when we reason, we are bound to make errors, and so we can never trust the arguments we
give for any claim. But then that applies to the skeptic's argument for skepticism! So if the skeptic is right, we should not pay
attention to skepticism, since the skeptic arrives at the skeptical conclusion by reasoning. And if the skeptic is wrong, then of
course we need not pay attention to skepticism. In either case, we need not take skepticism about the reliability of our
faculties seriously.
The form of Reid's argument is a dilemma, like this: if P, then Q; if not-P, then Q;
either P or not-P; therefore, in either case, Q. Either the skeptic is right, in which case we can't
trust our ability our reason and so can't trust the skeptic's conclusion; or the skeptic is wrong, in which case again we can't
trust the skeptic's conclusion. In either case we don't have to worry about skepticism!
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