Science Daily
 
Experimental Philosophy Movement Explores Real-Life  Dilemmas

 
ScienceDaily (July 4, 2008) — Imagine a  business executive who thinks: "I 
know that this new policy will harm the  environment, but I don't care at 
all about that -- I just want to increase  profits." Is the business executive 
harming the environment intentionally? Faced  with this question from a 
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill  philosopher, 82 percent of people 
polled said yes.
 
But then UNC scholar Joshua Knobe changed the word "harm" to "help." This  
time, the executive thinks: "I know that this new policy will help the  
environment, but I don't care at all about that -- I just want to increase  
profits." Is the business executive helping the environment intentionally? This 
 
time, only 33 percent of respondents said yes. 
These are the sorts of questions posed in a new movement called 
experimental  philosophy, where scholars leave their armchairs to talk to 
people 
directly  about how they form their opinions and values. A new book by Knobe 
and  
University of Arizona philosopher Shaun Nichols being published this month 
is  the first volume to discuss the controversial approach that is 
challenging  conventional notions about the discipline. 
"Experimental Philosophy" (Oxford University Press), edited by Knobe and  
Nichols, brings together seven "greatest hits," considered the most 
influential  papers in experimental philosophy. It also includes several 
provocative 
new  papers, including an introductory chapter by Knobe and Nichols, "An 
Experimental  Philosophy Manifesto." 
Although the experimental philosophy movement is only a few years old, it 
has  already led to a surge of new research -- including experimental studies 
that  explore people's ordinary understanding of morality, free will, 
happiness and  other key philosophical issues. The aim is to dive right into 
the 
messy real  world and to use psychological experimentation to get at the 
roots of  philosophical problems. 
"If you look back through the history of philosophy -- all the way from the 
 ancient Greeks to the 19th century Germans -- you find in-depth 
discussions of  how ordinary people actually think and feel," said Knobe, an 
assistant 
professor  of philosophy in UNC's College of Arts and Sciences. "The aim of 
experimental  philosophy is to return the discipline to this more 
traditional approach. The  only difference is that contemporary experimental 
philosophers address their  questions by actually going out and running 
experiments." 
Studies like the one involving the business executive and the environment 
can  help get at the roots of philosophical debates, Knobe said. "Experiments 
like  these are beginning to suggest that people's ordinary way of 
understanding the  world is suffused through and through with moral 
considerations." 
"This sort of research is important not only for its philosophical  
implications but also for what it tells us about how people ordinarily think,"  
Knobe added. "The more we know about how people make moral judgments, the more  
we will be able to understand how people come to blame each other and enter 
into  conflict." 
Nichols added that one of the most exciting prospects of experimental  
philosophy is that it can help assess whether certain cherished philosophical  
beliefs are well grounded. "By figuring out the psychological sources of our  
philosophical beliefs, we are in a better position to evaluate whether we 
are  justified in having those beliefs," he said.

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