My main point, to reiterate, has been that the very act of positing invisible entities, of whatever kind, is a feature of all cultures, and is thus itself commonsensical. — Janus
Okay, it's clear now we've misunderstood each other in a couple ways, mostly my fault. Apologies.
I never intended "common sense" to be something like "what most people believe", and certainly not "what most people have ever believed throughout all of human history".
In fact, in the essay I've been relying on,
Philosophy and the Scientific Image of Man, Sellars actually
stipulates that there are two images based on two different approaches to understanding man's place in the world: the correlational (the manifest image, my "ordinary everyday reasoning") and the stipulational (the scientific image). It's not an empirical distinction. I kinda pretended it was for purposes of this discussion because (a) I didn't want to try to rehearse Sellars's entire argument, and (b) in the modern world I thought the distinction between how people get along in daily life -- driving, working, buying groceries -- and creating complex theoretical frameworks that posit new types of entities to explain what goes on in the world -- I thought that distinction would be clear enough.
I should have recognized there was a problem when you mentioned animism. When I said there was a different just-so story I could tell, but then didn't, it was Sellars's story about something a bit like animism: this is the original form of the manifest image. This original manifest image treats everything in the world as a person. He's careful to say this is not a matter of postulating a spirit that lives in the mountain, but that being a mountain is one of the ways of being a person, and as a person you can do things like get angry and make grumbly noises and throw shit. This is still a worldview that only includes sensible objects, it's just that they're all persons.
He does not discuss religion at all except to include it in the manifest image, and here again I took a shortcut, because the manifest image is not exactly ordinary reasoning about medium-sized dry goods, but an elaboration and refinement of that, and an attempt to hold it together in the face of science.
Why doesn't he talk about religion? We are accustomed these days to talk sometimes of science and religion as competing theoretical frameworks, or in some cases as exactly the same framework with exactly one more theoretical posit, a supreme being. Or we tell stories about man's attempt to understand the world going from superstition to religion to science: all are explanatory frameworks, all have theoretical posits, but when we get to science we have a procedure for testing and a criterion of falsifiability. On this view, the new-atheist approach of treating religion as a competitor in the same market, at least insofar as it offers supernatural rather than natural explanations of phenomena, is perfectly reasonable.
And indeed it's a little messy mapping this onto Sellars's distinction:
the contrast I have in mind is not that between an unscientific conception of man-in-the-world and a scientific one, but between that conception which limits itself to what correlational techniques can tell us about perceptible and introspectible events and that which postulates imperceptible objects and events for the purpose of explaining correlations among perceptibles. — PSIM
So religion, if not animism, goes on the postulational side, right? We say things like, the Greeks explained the behavior of the oceans by having an ocean-god, the behavior of the skies by having a sky-god, volcanoes get a volcano-god, and so on. In the same way that science posits gravity to explain why apples fall to the earth, the Greeks posited Aeolus to explain the winds. Same thing.
The other link I keep posting, is an excerpt from
an interview with Richard Feynman. The point of that reference is two-fold: (1) the use he makes of "framework" as part of my argument that without theory it's not science; (2) what he says at the very end:
But I really can't do a good job, any job, of explaining magnetic force in terms of something else that you're more familiar with, because I don't understand it in terms of anything else that you're more familiar with.
The Greek gods -- those are persons, clearly, famously, like us, with emotions and everything. In the stories they're even perceptible, you can talk to them and fight with them. The god of Abraham is a person. Whether these categories hold perfectly is not quite the point. Religious concepts are elaborated and refined like anything else, and we may end up with descriptions that don't quite fit the person category, at least not the one we use now, all that well.
But still, maybe we're talking about persons, but we're still
postulating those persons, right? And this is the point of the Feynman thing: the posits of science are not something you already have elsewhere in the framework, but different
kinds of entities. If I open a door that swings away from me and it thumps to a stop after a opening a little and there's an "Ow!" sound from the other side, it's, to use your phrase,
common sense that I've just whacked someone with the door. You might think of that as a theory you have quickly whipped up that includes a postulated person, and I'm not going to deny you that. Go ahead. Cognitive science tells stories like that too. But what you're not doing is positing a new
kind of entity. You're gathering some evidence and doing some deducing, or your brain is, whatever. But that's not all science is.
And I can already hear you saying "that's exactly what it is", so please stop and think about how theoretical frameworks work, what is involved a positing a new type of entity, and so on. Maybe you could find another source besides me to explain how science works. Maybe you can come back and tell me I'm all wrong. We've probably already reached the limits of my understanding here, so I'd be happy to stipulate that I have no more to offer by way of further explanation.