The Burden of Proof upon Metaphysical Methods

Springer Verlag (2023)
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Abstract

Who carries the burden of proof in analytic philosophical debates, and how can this burden be satisfied? As it turns out, the answer to this joint question yields a fundamental challenge to the very conduct of metaphysics in analytic philosophy. Empirical research presented in this book indicates that the vastly predominant goal pursued in analytic philosophical dialogues lies not in discovering truths or generating knowledge, but merely in prevailing over one’s opponents. Given this goal, the book examines how most effectively to allocate and discharge the burden of proof. It focuses on premises that must prudently be avoided because a burden of proof on them could never be satisfied, and in particular discusses unsupportable bridge premises across inference barriers, like Hume’s barrier between ‘is’ and ‘ought’, or the barrier between the content of our talk or thought, and the world beyond such content. Employing this content/world barrier for a critical assessment of mainstream analytic philosophical methods, this book argues that we must prudently avoid invoking intuitions or other content of thought or talk in support of claims about the world beyond content, that is, metaphysically significant claims. Yet as content-located evidence is practically indispensable to metaphysical debates throughout analytic philosophy, from ethics to the philosophy of mathematics, this book reaches the startling conclusion that all such metaphysical debates must, prudently, be terminated.

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Chapters

Evidence, Inference, and Empiricism

This chapter examines how the burden of proof can be discharged. It is argued that evidence in support of a questioned hypothesis is persuasively useless if it differs in kind from that hypothesis (e.g. descriptive evidence in support of a normative hypothesis), because the inferential premise stati... see more

Dialogue and Persuasion

This chapter establishes two key premises. First, commitments in dialogue do not necessitate corresponding commitments in beliefs or other attitudinal states, nor vice versa. Second, the goal pursued in analytic philosophical dialogues is to persuade one’s opponents—rather than, say, to generate kno... see more

Philosophical Methods between Content and the World

This chapter employs the inference barrier between the content of talk or thought, and the world beyond such content, for an assessment of common philosophical methods. Content-located evidence (e.g. intuitions) and objects of hypotheses (e.g. anthropogenic kinds) are distinguished from world-locate... see more

Escaping Dialogical Empiricism

This chapter assesses ways to avoid the preceding anti-metaphysical conclusion. Said conclusion can be accommodated by opting for a coherentist framework, located solely within content, or by opting for a type of dialogue other than persuasion-directed dialogue—though neither option is entirely sati... see more

Metaphysical Hypotheses

This chapter applies the content/world barrier to more substantive debates in analytic philosophy, including to normative, modal, epistemic, and ontological debates. It is argued that assertions about norms and necessities are unsupportable in analytic philosophy (also due to the is/ought barrier an... see more

The Burden of Proof

This chapter addresses the following question: If you assert a proposition and your interlocutor questions the same, then are you invariably required to accept the burden of proof, and to provide support for this proposition—or may you sometimes demand support for the proposition’s negation instead,... see more

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