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Some Paradoxes of Counterprivacy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2009

André Gombay
Affiliation:
University of Toronto

Extract

For many years G. E. Moore asked himself what was wrong with sentences like ‘I went to the pictures last Tuesday, but I don't believe that I did’, or ‘I believe that he has gone out, but he has not’. He discussed the problem in 1912 in his Ethics, and was still discussing it in 1944 in a paper to the Moral Sciences Club at Cambridge—an event we know about from a letter of Wittgenstein that I shall quote in a moment. Throughout these years of pondering, Moore retained a remarkably stable vocabulary for setting out his solution. Briefly, he held this: saying ‘I went to the pictures last Tuesday, but I don't believe that I did’ is absurd, but not self-contradictory. Not self-contradictory, because ‘it may quite well be true’; yet absurd, because the speaker expressly repudiates, in the second part of the sentence, a belief which he implies by uttering the first part. The panoply of distinctions which subtends this doctrine—sentence v. utterance of sentence, saying v. implying, contradiction v. absurdity—was subjected to keen scrutiny a generation or so ago, and much of it has now passed into philosophical lore as a discussion of ‘Moore's Paradox’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1988

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References

1 Note that, at least in the case of indifference, I assign to Socrates a stronger thesis than he actually enunciates: he speaks of knowledge; in my version, judgment is enough.

2 Descartes, it is true, held that deceit bespoke weakness; but that view is anomalous even in the seventeenth century, a century—incidentally—much given to reflection upon that subject.

3 I am putting what follows into a footnote because it is (a) an aside (b) a point whose proper making would require a defence which I am not about to provide. Among Anglo-Saxon philosophers, it is customary to regard Wittgenstein as the mighty anti-Cartesian, perhaps even the final dragon-slayer. Well, perhaps. Yet there can have been few men whose lives, thoughts and characters have been so remarkably parallel. Let me mention just one conjunction, which is relevant to our topic. We saw that in the months before his death Wittgenstein was concerned about what God might say to him. A more laically minded Descartes worries about his fellow men. In 1646, he writes to Chanut that he has now taken this verse of Seneca's as his motto (AT IV, 537): Iili mors gravis incubat, qui notus nimis omnibus, ignotus moritur sibi (‘A harsh death awaits that man who dies only too well known to everyone and unknown to himself’). Neither man has the tranquil assurance of a Hume—the philosopher, perhaps, who has had the least feel for counterprivacy.