Moore’s Paradox, Defective Interpretation, Justified Belief and Conscious Belief


Συγγραφέας: John N. Williams


John N. Williams: Moore’s Paradox, Defective Interpretation, Justified Belief and Conscious Belief (pdf, 213K)
In this journal, Hamid Vahid argues against three families of explanation of Mooreparadoxicality. The first is the I/Wttgensteinian approach; I assert that p just in case I assert that I believe that p. So making a Moore-paradoxical assertion involves contradictory assertions. The second is the epistemic approach, one committed to: if I am justified in believing that p then I am justified in believing that I believe that p. So it is impossible to have a justified omissive Mooreparadoxical belief The third is the conscious belief approach, being committed to: if I consciously believe that p then I believe that I believe that p. So if I have a conscious omissive Moore-paradoxical belief, then I have contradictory second-order beliefs. In their place, Vahid argues for the dejectiveinterpretation approach, broadly that charity requires us to discount the utterer of a Mooreparadoxical sentence as a speaker. I agree that the Wittgensteinian approach is unsatisfactory. But so is the defective-interpretation approach. However, there is a satisfactory version of each of the epistemic and conscious-belief approaches.