NY Times
 
Opinionator
 
January 25, 2012, 9:05 pm  
Philosophy — What’s the Use?
By _GARY  GUTTING_ 
(http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/author/gary-gutting/) 

 
Almost every article that appears in The Stone provokes some comments from  
readers challenging the very idea that philosophy has anything relevant to 
say  to non-philosophers.  There are, in particular, complaints that 
philosophy  is an irrelevant “ivory-tower” exercise, useless to any except 
those 
interested  in logic-chopping for its own sake.  
There is an important conception of philosophy that falls to this  
criticism.  Associated especially with earlier modern philosophers,  
particularly 
René Descartes, this conception sees philosophy as the essential  foundation 
of the beliefs that guide our everyday life.  For  example, I act as though 
there is a material world and other people who  experience it as I do.   But 
how do I know that any of this is  true?  Couldn’t I just be dreaming of a 
world outside my thoughts?   And, since (at best) I see only other human 
bodies, what reason do I have to  think that there are any minds connected to 
those bodies?  To answer these  questions, it would seem that I need rigorous 
philosophical arguments for my  existence and the existence of other 
thinking humans.

Of course, I don’t actually need any such arguments,  if only because I 
have no practical alternative to believing that I and other  people exist.  As 
soon as we stop thinking weird philosophical thoughts, we  immediately go 
back to believing what skeptical arguments seem to call into  question.  And 
rightly so, since, as David Hume pointed out, we are human  beings before we 
are philosophers. 
But what Hume and, by our day, virtually all philosophers are rejecting is  
only what I’m calling the foundationalist conception of philosophy.  
Rejecting foundationalism means accepting that we have every right to hold 
basic  
beliefs that are not legitimated by philosophical reflection.  More  
recently, philosophers as different as Richard Rorty and Alvin Plantinga have  
cogently argued that such basic beliefs include not only the “Humean” beliefs  
that no one can do without, but also substantive beliefs on controversial  
questions of ethics, politics and religion.  Rorty, for example, maintained  
that the basic principles of liberal democracy require no philosophical  
grounding (“the priority of democracy over philosophy”). 
If you think that the only possible “use” of philosophy would be to 
provide a  foundation for beliefs that need no foundation, then the conclusion 
that  philosophy is of little importance for everyday life follows immediately. 
  But there are other ways that philosophy can be of practical 
significance. 
Even though basic beliefs on ethics, politics and religion do not require  
prior philosophical justification, they do need what we might call “
intellectual  maintenance,” which itself typically involves philosophical 
thinking.  
 Religious believers, for example, are frequently troubled by the existence 
of  horrendous evils in a world they hold was created by an all-good God.  
Some  of their trouble may be emotional, requiring pastoral guidance.  But  
religious commitment need not exclude a commitment to coherent thought. For  
instance, often enough believers want to know if their belief in God makes 
sense  given the reality of evil.  The philosophy of religion is full of  
discussions relevant to this question.  Similarly, you may be an atheist  
because you think all arguments for God’s existence are obviously fallacious.  
But if you encounter, say, a sophisticated version of the cosmological 
argument,  or the design argument from fine-tuning, you may well need a clever 
philosopher  to see if there’s anything wrong with it. 
 
In addition to defending our basic beliefs against objections,  we 
frequently need to clarify what our basic beliefs mean or logically entail.  
So, if 
I say I would never kill an innocent person, does that mean that I  wouldn’t 
order the bombing of an enemy position if it might kill some civilians?  
Does a commitment to democratic elections require one to accept a fair 
election  that puts an anti-democratic party into power?  Answering such 
questions  
requires careful conceptual distinctions, for example, between direct and  
indirect results of actions, or between a morality of intrinsically wrong  
actions and a morality of consequences. Such distinctions are major  
philosophical topics, of course, and most non-philosophers won’t be in a  
position 
to enter into high-level philosophical discussions.  But there are  both 
non-philosophers who are quite capable of following such discussions and  
philosophers who enter public debates about relevant topics.

The perennial objection to any appeal to philosophy is that philosophers  
themselves disagree among themselves about everything, so that there is no 
body  of philosophical knowledge on which non-philosophers can rely.  It’s 
true  that philosophers do not agree on answers to the “big questions” like God
’s  existence, free will, the nature of moral obligation and so on.  But 
they  do agree about many logical interconnections and conceptual distinctions 
that  are essential for thinking clearly about the big questions.   Some  
examples: thinking about God and evil requires the key distinction between 
evil  that is gratuitous (not necessary for some greater good) and evil that 
is not  gratuitous; thinking about free will requires the distinction between 
a choice’s  being caused and its being compelled; and thinking about 
morality requires the  distinction between an action that is intrinsically 
wrong 
(regardless of its  consequences) and one that is wrong simply because of its 
consequences.   Such distinctions arise from philosophical thinking, and 
philosophers know a  great deal about how to understand and employ them.  In 
this important  sense, there is body of philosophical knowledge on which 
non-philosophers can  and should rely.

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