Dear All,

The next meeting of the Moral Sciences Club will be held on Tuesday 6th
February. We are delighted to welcome Jack Woods (Leeds), who will be
giving a paper entitled 'Abductive Immodesty in Mathematics and Morality'.
The abstract is below:


It’s increasingly common to recognize that philosophical arguments
typically are abductive in character. From Lewis’s original slogan about
philosophy being a game of costing views, to the rise of
anti-exceptionalism in logic, to the now near universal use of methods like
reflective equilibrium in ethics and metaethics, philosophers have started
to recognize that often the best we can do, even in esoteric areas like
logic and morality, is argue that such and so is the best explanation of
some phenomena like our trenchant intuitions about some area. While this is
a welcome change, adductive arguments involve relatively heavy theoretical
resources that themselves can be in contention. This means that we will
occasionally have an argument whose conclusion conflicts with some of the
supporting materials we use to justify that conclusion. Call such arguments
*self-effacing*.


In recent work, I used such cases to distinguish debunking arguments
against logic and mathematics from debunking arguments against morality,
responding to a tendency to treat these cases as analogous. I maintain,
still, that the self-effacingness of typical debunking arguments against
logic and mathematics blocks certain forms of skepticism about mathematical
and logical realism. But I worry now that certain not unreasonable ethical,
metaethical, and aesthetic presumptions, analogous debunking arguments
against (some of) morality and aesthetics are also self-effacing. Though
this calls into question my earlier conclusions, I’ll argue that we still
have much stronger reason to preserve our mathematical and logical beliefs
in the face of a cogent debunking argument than we have to preserve our
moral beliefs in the fact of such arguments. And this difference in
strength—which is due to the depths of the entanglement of mathematics and
logic in our abductive machinery--suffices to vindicate the rationality of
being immodest about our mathematical and logical beliefs while being
modest about our moral beliefs and perhaps our aesthetic beliefs; it
provides a substantial additional reason to maintain our mathematical and
logical beliefs in the face of debunking arguments aimed at our logical and
mathematical beliefs.




The meeting will be held at 2:30 until 4:15, in the Barbara White Room at
Newnham College, and will be followed by tea and coffee.

If you would like to have dinner with the speaker in the evening following
his talk at the Moral Sciences Club, please email the secretaries of the
club ([email protected]) by midday on Monday 5 February.

This dinner is open to anyone who has attended the talk and it will take
place at around 7pm at a location to be determined (those who sign up for
dinner will be notified of the details by email closer to the time).


--
Karamvir Chadha and Cathy Mason
Secretaries of the Moral Sciences Club
Faculty of Philosophy
University of Cambridge
[email protected]
http://www.phil.cam.ac.uk/seminars-phil/seminars-msc
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