{"title":"EXPLANATION AND JUSTIFICATION: UNDERSTANDING THE FUNCTIONS OF FACT-INSENSITIVE PRINCIPLES","authors":"Kyle Johannsen","doi":"10.18740/S4DW3P","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In recent work, Andrew T. Forcehimes and Robert B. Talisse correctly note that G.A. Cohen’s fact-insensitivity thesis, properly understood, is explanatory. This observation raises an important concern. If fact-insensitive principles are explanatory, then what role can they play in normative deliberations? The purpose of my paper is, in part, to address this question. Following David Miller, I indicate that on a charitable understanding of Cohen’s thesis, an explanatory principle explains a justificatory fact by completing an otherwise logically incomplete inference. As a result, the explanatory role such a principle plays is inseparable from its status as a (not necessarily successful) justificatory reason. With this interpretation in hand, I then proceed to argue that Lea Ypi’s and Robert Jubb’s recent criticisms fail to undermine Cohen’s thesis, and that fact-insensitive principles, once discovered, are especially helpful for purposes of deliberation in circumstances characterized by changing and changeable feasibility constraints.","PeriodicalId":29667,"journal":{"name":"Socialist Studies","volume":"109 1","pages":"174-174"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2016-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Socialist Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.18740/S4DW3P","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"POLITICAL SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
In recent work, Andrew T. Forcehimes and Robert B. Talisse correctly note that G.A. Cohen’s fact-insensitivity thesis, properly understood, is explanatory. This observation raises an important concern. If fact-insensitive principles are explanatory, then what role can they play in normative deliberations? The purpose of my paper is, in part, to address this question. Following David Miller, I indicate that on a charitable understanding of Cohen’s thesis, an explanatory principle explains a justificatory fact by completing an otherwise logically incomplete inference. As a result, the explanatory role such a principle plays is inseparable from its status as a (not necessarily successful) justificatory reason. With this interpretation in hand, I then proceed to argue that Lea Ypi’s and Robert Jubb’s recent criticisms fail to undermine Cohen’s thesis, and that fact-insensitive principles, once discovered, are especially helpful for purposes of deliberation in circumstances characterized by changing and changeable feasibility constraints.
在最近的研究中,安德鲁·t·福希姆斯(Andrew T. Forcehimes)和罗伯特·b·塔利斯(Robert B. Talisse)正确地指出,如果正确理解,g·a·科恩的事实不敏感理论是解释性的。这一观察结果引起了一个重要的关注。如果对事实不敏感的原则是解释性的,那么它们在规范性审议中可以发挥什么作用?我这篇论文的目的,部分是为了解决这个问题。在大卫·米勒的基础上,我指出,在对科恩的论点的仁慈理解上,解释性原则通过完成一个逻辑上不完整的推理来解释一个证明事实。因此,这一原则所起的解释作用与其作为正当性理由(不一定是成功的)的地位是分不开的。有了这样的解释,我接下来要论证的是,Lea Ypi和Robert Jubb最近的批评并没有破坏Cohen的论点,而且事实不敏感原则一旦被发现,对于以不断变化和多变的可行性约束为特征的情况下的审议目的特别有帮助。