Ron quoted William James:
The conclusion is that our worldview does not need "extraneous trans-empirical 
connective support, but possesses in its own right a concatenated or continuous 
structure." ...James is in fact refining empiricism to exclude "trans-empirical 
connective support" which is a kind of rationalism, the charge against 
positivism as well. Pragmatic Value and meaning therefore has a "truer" grip on 
the interpretation of experience.

dmb says:I think "extraneous trans-empirical connective support" is another way 
of saying "metaphysical fiction" or "invented entities not known in 
experience". Or, as John Stuhr put it in relation to Dewey, James is talking 
about the error of conferring existential status upon the products of 
reflection". This error is also known simply as "reification". Reification is 
when you treat abstract concepts as if they were concrete realities. I think 
James is charging both the rationalists and the traditional empiricists with 
this error. In the case of the Hegelians, their main metaphysical fiction is 
Absolute Mind and in the case of the Humians their main metaphysical fictions 
are subjects and objects. The positivists would certainly count as traditional 
empiricists so this charge applies to positive science as well. It's really 
quite sweeping. Since radical empiricism is an attempt to get rid of these 
trans-empirical fictions, meaning metaphysical entities that are beyond 
experience, it is more empirical than traditional empiricism. Radical 
empiricism also insists that we cannot exclude from our philosophical 
constructions "any element that is directly experienced". That also makes it 
more empirical than traditional empiricism. The particular element that the 
traditional empiricists tended to exclude despite the fact that it is directly 
experience, was the experience of conjunctive relations. Thus his emphasis on 
the continuity of experience. These are the relations that connect into a 
seamless whole the elements that had been made discrete by traditional sensory 
empiricism. Radical empiricism excludes un-empirical things and includes a 
wider range of things that are experienced and so I think it's more than fair 
to say it expands upon traditional empiricism. It's not just an extension 
however. The relation between the two forms of empiricism is something like the 
relation between Newtonian physics and Einstein's physics. In both cases you'll 
find them working with "gravity" but that word means one thing to Newton and 
quite another thing to Einstein. You see the same sort of thing in these rival 
forms of empiricism. Both schools of thought are going to use the word 
"experience" and that term will be central to both schools but the traditional 
meaning of the word is very different from the meaning it is given within 
radical empiricism.

"To be radical, an empiricism must neither admit into its constructions any 
element that is not directly experienced, not exclude form them any element 
that is directly experienced. For such a philosophy, THE RELATIONS THAT CONNECT 
EXPERIENCES MUST THEMSELVES BE EXPERIENCED RELATIONS, AND ANY KIND OF RELATION 
EXPERIENCED MUST BE ACCOUNTED AS 'REAL' AS ANYTHING ELSE IN THE SYSTEM. 
Elements may indeed be redistributed, the original placing of things getting 
corrected, but a real place must be found for every kind of thing experienced, 
whether term or relation, in the final philosophic arrangement." (From "A World 
of Pure Experience", the emphasis is James's)

Ron said:

I think what he points to is the idea that sensory empiricism IS in fact a kind 
of rationalism, this is the rationalism he builds his argument against in his 
essays on radical empiricism. So you are correct, he does rail against 
rationalism, but its the rationalism of sensory empiricism. ... Ironically, 
Dave is actually charging YOU with being a rationalist by calling you a 
reductionist.

dmb says:No, I don't think of it like that. Rationalism and empiricism are 
nearly opposite approaches and I don't think it's very helpful to confuse or 
conflate them. James is accusing them both of creating fictional metaphysical 
entities to work as a kind of philosophical glue to overcome fake philosophical 
problems, however. He's accusing them both of reification. I'd say my 
accusation of reductionism against Krimel is aimed at what I see as his 
adherence to SOM and traditional empiricism and contemporary scientific 
materialism. As we saw in the wiki article on radical empiricism, James was 
also concerned with the reductionistic tendencies of that outlook. In fact, I 
think the discussion of the differences between the two kinds of empiricism is 
quite appropriate and relevant to reductionism, the topic of this thread.

Krimel said:
...No, I have not been saying that James is the same as Hume and Locke. He is 
adding the experience of conjunction and disjunction to overcome the limits of 
simple sensory empiricism. In terms of radical empiricism his aim to still to 
overcome rationalism. It certainly is not his aim to do some kind of reverse 
zwabydah and turn empiricism into rationalism. Dave would paint James as a 
rationalist in empirical clothing. But I am saying that he is just adding to 
the British empiricists not throwing them out.

dmb says:
Well, no don't see James as a rationalist. Not at all. And I think it would be 
a huge mistake to think that James is merely adding to British empiricism. Let 
me remind you that this last set of exchanges was prompted by your assertion 
that SOM was just a vague label, a straw man that no philosophers took 
seriously. In reply, I posted quotes wherein James identifies subject-object 
philosophies as a philosophical problem. By going after that problem, James's 
radical empiricism undermines the most basic metaphysical assumptions of the 
British empiricists. It is simply wrong to call that an addition or extension. 
He's upsetting and overturning the very foundations upon which those 
empiricists stood. In ZAMM, you'll recall, this overturning of SOM is compared 
to a Copernican revolution. I think that's much closer to a proper 
characterization of the scope and scale of the difference between radical 
empiricism and sensory empiricism. It's true that in both cases, the empiricist 
says that experience is the starting point of reality but "experience" means 
two totally different things, depending on which type of empiricism you're 
discussing. In the old school, it meant the experience of the objective reality 
by a subjective experiencer so that subjects and objects are the pre-requisites 
of experience, are the concrete realities that give rise to experience. But in 
radical empiricism it is the other way around. Experience comes first and 
subjects and objects are derived from that. They are secondary and conceptual, 
not primary and existential. 





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