While thought experiments are as old as philosophy itself, the weight placed on them in recent philosophy is distinctive. Even when scenarios are highly unrealistic, judgments about them are thought to have wide-ranging implications for what should be done in the real world. The assumption is that, if you can show that a point of ethical principle holds in one artfully designed case, however bizarre, then this tells us something significant. Many non-philosophers baulk at this suggestion.
any case, this is mostly an excuse to pimp out the article, and induce some discussion about the role of thought experiments in philosophy more generally. — StreetlightX
So too, I think, should philosophers. It's hard to imagine more terrible ways of thinking about philosophical problems than via thought experiment. At best, they ought to be used as examples of how not to think; or how to think in circumstances that are extremely constrained and rare. — StreetlightX
That's just one example. The article linked gives some nice intrinsic reasons why thought expriements make for pretty terrible philosophy. Among them of course being that thought experiments are almost uniformly artificial and, again, totally ungeneralizable. The article itself focuses on what it calls ethical thought experiments, but I think the same is true for other well known ones too. The damage that 'brain in the vat' thought experiments have wrought on philosophy of mind, for instance, is I think incalculable. But that's another story.
In any case, this is mostly an excuse to pimp out the article, and induce some discussion about the role of thought experiments in philosophy more generally. — StreetlightX
What is it like to be a bat? Nagel. — unenlightened
Also, the p-zombie thought experiment — Marchesk
A trolley operated by a p zombie is like a self-driving car, passengers or pedestrians? But the zombie has no morality by definition, we have to program it with our morals. — unenlightened
Philosopher: I have a thought experiment where I'm just a brain in a jar. — fdrake
t's just certain philosophies attempt to buy into the preteige of scientific association. — StreetlightX
it's just expressing a modern version of age-old concerns about skepticism, because are heads are the jars. — Marchesk
That's ok dear, that's ok. — fdrake
He'd learn he was a bat dreaming of being John Wick in the Matrix. — Marchesk
Still an appropriate response, no? — Isaac
Yes, but what is it like to be a bat dreaming of being John Wick in the Matrix? — Isaac
It's just certain philosophies attempt to buy into the preteige of scientific association. — StreetlightX
And? I don't care about physicalism. — StreetlightX
What even is your point? — StreetlightX
Since these are the meat of most moral questions I'm not sure what value that could possibly have. — Isaac
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.