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O Christianos Cryptos; Amor Vincit Omnia!
- Oct 21, 2004
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Such an attitude is fine with me, but I'll add a caveat in favor of human ingenuity in thought. I would have no objection to someone contemplating the possible implications of a brain-in-vat universe; all things being equal, if someone thinks that this might be a useful way of thinking about the universe and other questions- such as the aforementioned- it will have benefits far beyond its truth value. Simply dismissing the idea in favor of... nothing?... is hardly a productive enterprise and would negate the possibility of the benefits such a line of contemplation.Oh, I didn´t suggest prejudicing one over another. I haven´t even given an alternative explanation (except those that I gave for the purposes of reductio ad absurdum, that is).
Yet, I would for example prefer a more general explanation over an unnecessarily detailed one. There are ways to question the accuracy of our perception without already deciding that we must be "brains in a vat", but include this possibility. The implications would be by and large the same, without the added details.
Oh, no problem. Let them stand.
I just have little inclination to occupy myself with the consideration of an infinite number of hypothetical detailed scenarios when the hypothetical details add no significant relevance.
In my brief career as an anthropologist, I've always been interested in origins of things- why is it that suddenly in this millennium unspoken assumptions such as the utility of parsimony in decision making become "laws", and discussions about the dreams of God and evil demons become conversations about the vats of scientists? The debate over the situations proposed situations of philosophers like Descartes and Stroud is so interesting to me on many levels, that I would disappointed if the whole line of thought were discarded as plausibly irrational. In other words, there may not be any special truth value in the brain-in-a-vat theory, but there is no particular reason to suspect that it is not true either, so if there are other interesting reasons to pursue the line of inquiry (and I think there are) than we would be cheating ourselves to drop the ball on it too soon. This is the real danger of Occam's razor- it encourages the premature rejection of possibilities that may prove fruitful. We really know much less than we think we do.
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