Epistemological solipsism as a route to external world skepticism

IF 1.6 1区 哲学 N/A PHILOSOPHY Philosophical Perspectives Pub Date : 2021-10-23 DOI:10.1111/phpe.12146
Grace Helton
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

There are almost 8 billion human beings on the planet. Some of these I know personally. They are my colleagues, neighbors, friends, and family members. Others are distant strangers, most of whom I will never meet. I take it for granted that all of these beings are, like myself, sentient. I presume that they have opinions and aspirations, hopes and dreads; that they experience intense pleasures and sharp pains, along with dull aches, surprise, simple satisfaction, ennui, and deep longing; that they can reflect, contemplate, learn, interpret the world and themselves, and act on those interpretations. Certainly, I do not think my fellow humans are mere automata, mindless entities that somehow manage to give off the appearance of sentience. In fact, psychologically speaking, it is extraordinarily difficult for me to take seriously, even as a remote possibility, that these others might somehow fail to be sentient. Still, I can ask: Do I know that these others are sentient? Do I know that I am not alone in the universe?1 Epistemological solipsism (sometimes abbreviated to solipsism) is the view that I do not know that other minds exist. One way of motivating this view draws from the possibility that others might appear to be sentient whilst altogether lacking a mental life. On one line of reasoning, if I cannot rule out that this possibility obtains, then I do not know that other minds exist, even if the others around me are in fact sentient.2 Epistemological solipsism does not enjoy a central place in contemporary philosophical theorizing.3 The reasons for this are no doubt complex, but I would conjecture that the following is one contributing factor: epistemological solipsism is presumed to be easily refutable, for instance, on broadly abductive grounds. For presumably the best explanation of why others seem to be sentient is that they are sentient.4 If solipsism can be ruled out this easily, then perhaps solipsism doesn’t warrant a central position in philosophical theorizing. I would conjecture than an additional factor which contributes to solipsism’s neglected status is the fact that solipsism is sometimes taken to be merely a special instance of external world skepticism. External world skepticism is, at a minimum, the view that vast swathes of your empirical beliefs about the world outside your mind fail to amount to knowledge. Unlike solipsism, external world skepticism enjoys a highly central place in contemporary epistemology; indeed, its refutation is sometimes taken to be the raison d’être of epistemological theorizing.5 If solipsism’s
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认识论唯我论是通向外部世界怀疑主义的途径
地球上有将近80亿人。其中一些我个人知道。他们是我的同事、邻居、朋友和家人。其他人都是遥远的陌生人,他们中的大多数我永远不会遇到。我想当然地认为,所有这些生命,就像我自己一样,都是有知觉的。我认为他们有意见和愿望,有希望和恐惧;他们经历了强烈的快乐和剧烈的疼痛,还有沉闷的疼痛、惊讶、简单的满足、厌倦和深深的渴望;他们能够反思、思考、学习、解读世界和自己,并根据这些解读采取行动。当然,我不认为我的人类同胞仅仅是自动机,无意识的实体,以某种方式设法表现出感知的样子。事实上,从心理上讲,我很难认真对待这些其他人可能不知何故没有感知能力,即使这是一种遥远的可能性。尽管如此,我还是可以问:我知道其他人有知觉吗?我知道我在宇宙中并不孤单吗?1认识论唯我论(有时缩写为唯我论)是一种我不知道其他思想存在的观点。激发这种观点的一种方式是,其他人可能看起来有知觉,但完全缺乏精神生活。在一条推理线上,如果我不能排除这种可能性的存在,那么我就不知道其他人的存在,即使我周围的其他人实际上是有知觉的。2认识论唯我论在当代哲学理论中并不占据中心地位。3这一点的原因无疑是复杂的,但我推测,以下是一个促成因素:认识论唯我论被认为很容易被反驳,例如,基于广泛的溯因。因为对于为什么其他人看起来有知觉,最好的解释大概是他们有知觉。4如果唯我论可以很容易地被排除在外,那么也许唯我论不值得在哲学理论中占据中心地位。我猜想,导致唯我论被忽视的另一个因素是,唯我论有时被认为只是外部世界怀疑论的一个特殊例子。外部世界怀疑论至少是一种观点,即你对头脑之外世界的大量经验信念不足以构成知识。与唯我论不同,外部世界怀疑论在当代认识论中具有高度的中心地位;事实上,它的反驳有时被认为是认识论理论存在的理由。5如果唯我论
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