
Peter J. Graham
University of California, Riverside, USA
A Review of Gábor Forrai's
Reference, Truth and Conceptual Schemes:
A Defense of Internal Realism
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Peter J. Graham
February 11, 2002
Gabor Forrai has written a very clear and
articulate defense of internal realism, the
view that the categories and structures of
the world are a function of our conceptual
schemes. Internal realism is opposed to metaphysical
realism, the view that the world's structure
is wholly independent, both causally and
ontologically, of the human mind. For the
metaphysical realist, the world is one thing
and the mind is another. For the internal
realist, on the other hand, though the world
is causally independent of the human mind,
the structure of the world-the individuals,
kinds and categories of the world-is a function
of the human mind.
Internal realism is a fascinating view. It
has its roots in the metaphysics of Kant,
and its most important contemporary defender
is, Hilary Putnam. Strains of it can be found
in the work of a number of other philosophers,
both Analytic and Continental, perhaps most
notably in the work of Richard Rorty. But
it strikes many as counter-intuitive, contrary
to common sense, and even absurd. An exposition
and defense of the view in a book of moderate
length that is both accessible to newcomers
and advances the debate is thus a welcome
contribution.
The book discusses a number of important
and influential positions in the philosophy
of language and mind, including Davidson
against the very idea of conceptual scheme,
Quine's indeterminacy of reference doctrine,
Tarski's theory of truth, Dummett's verificationism,
Putnam's model-theoretic argument and Twin
Earth thought experiment, Kuhn on paradigm
shifts, reference change, content externalism,
skepticism, and relativism. In the course
of the argument of the book, Forrai also
develops a novel approach to conceptual schemes,
an approach that, as Forrai successfully
argues, avoids Davidson's arguments against
what Davidson, among others, calls a conceptual
scheme.
Argumentatively there are two main aspects
to the book. The first concerns objectivity
and relativism, the second concerns reference,
truth and skepticism. I found what Forrai
has to say in the first part interesting
and worthwhile, and philosophers attracted
to internal realism but concerned about both
objectivity and relativism could profit from
studying what Forrai has to say. But I'm
not convinced that Forrai's discussion of
reference and skepticism constitutes an adequate
case against the metaphysical realist. In
the rest of this review, I'll briefly sketch
what Forrai has to say about objectivity
and relativism, and then go on to discuss
the debate between the metaphysical realist
and the internal realist over reference and
truth.
The problem of objectivity for the internal
realist is this. There seems to be cases
where a community gets things wrong; we sometimes
misclassify things. Forrai imagines a group
that classifies certain antelopes as zebras.
This looks like an error. The community has
failed to get the structure of reality right.
But if internal realism is true, reality
is a function of our classifications; there
can be no such thing as misclassification.
Reality becomes subjective.
Forrai's solution is to distinguish adequate
from inadequate conceptual schemes. A conceptual
scheme, for Forrai, is a device for coping
with a causally independent world, a world
that, though not intrinsically structured,
is nevertheless given to us; it constrains
what counts as a successful or adequate way
of carving up the world. Schemes are devices
for coping with the world, and some will
prove to be better than others. Inadequate
schemes, for Forrai, are those that fail
to prove as good as others at meeting the
needs for which they were designed. When
the imagined community notices the distinction
between zebras and antelopes, they give up
their scheme. Or even if they don't, since
we make the distinction, we see that there
is a better scheme. What the imagined community
refers to, Forrai claims, are not zebras
and antelopes by the term 'zebra', but rather
just zebras, and hence it follows that when
they classify antelopes as zebras they are
making a mistake. And all of this is compatible
with internal realism, for whether something
is a zebra or not is still a function of
the human mind, a function of an adequate
conceptual scheme. Misclassification is due
to inadequacy.
Part of Forrai's account of what makes a
scheme adequate is that the practice it serves
be choiceworthy. Choiceworthiness depends
upon two things. First, whether the goal
of the practice is worth pursuing, and second,
whether the practice coheres with other practices.
A problem Forrai sees for this account is
that it may imply relativism, for whether
a practice is choiceworthy, and so whether
a scheme is adequate, may vary relative to
the set of other background practices that
it is compared with for coherence. Adequacy,
and so truth and reality, my be relative
to complete sets of practices, that is, to
cultures. Cultural relativism is thus waiting
in the wings. But Forrai notes that it all
depends on whether cultures are really disjoint,
whether they fail to have practices in common.
It all depends, that is, on whether cultural
relativism is true. This is an important
point. Internal realism, unlike metaphysical
realism, may not block the truth of relativism,
but it does not entail it.
I now turn to debate between the internal
realist and the metaphysical realist over
reference and skepticism, over whether the
world is independent of the mind.
Forrai's first important move is to defuse
the argument that internal realism cannot
be true for our common sense framework has
it that the world is independent of the human
mind. Though Forrai agrees that this is how
the folk would have it, and also agrees that
any metaphysics must conform to it, what
the folk believes is ambiguous between two
readings of independence: causally versus
ontologically independent. Qualifications
aside, the first is clearly true. The world
is there whether we are or not. And the internal
realist agrees; the view is not a crude idealism.
But the second is not so obviously true.
Though many of us believe it, and may find
it very hard to give up, it may turn out
that it is false. Here is the debate between
the internal realist and the metaphysical
realist. Do we have good reason to prefer
the former answer over the latter?
A central question of Twentieth Century Anglo-American
philosophy is how does language hook up to
reality? For some, it is the problem of the
Twentieth Century. Forrai's central motivation
for preferring internal realism over metaphysical
realism is that the latter seems unable to
answer this question. According to the metaphysical
realist, our concepts and categories refer
by appropriately matching or mirroring the
real categories and structures, categories,
kinds, boundaries, and structures that are
fixed by the world, fixed wholly independently
of our concepts. They are there before we
are, and so they are what they are before
we come along and start carving things up.
When we successfully refer that is because
our efforts at carving the world up match
the way the world has done it on its own.
But then Forrai wonders, if our carving and
the world's carving are two separate things,
then how does it happen that our concepts
match the world? Forrai puts this in terms
of an analogy: suppose there is a two level
cake. Both layers are divided into slices.
The lower level is the ontologically mind-independent
structure of the real world, and the upper
is the mind-dependent carving, a carving
that is the result of our conceptualizations.
Why should the top layer, Forrai asks, match
the bottom layer? Although it is possible
that they match, it seems very unlikely,
Forrai says, that they will. Indeed, Forrai
says it would be something like a miracle
if our concepts should map onto entities
that are ontologically independent of the
mind. The solution the internal realist offers
is to suppose that the slicing of the lower
layer of cake is a function of the slicing
at the higher level. It would thus not be
a surprise if the two matched up. Reference
simply falls out of category constitution
and the individuation of objects.
The problem of reference asks something like
this, "How do parts of sentences hook
up to the world?" And the way Forrai
understands the question, it has to turn
out that some of our words do in fact refer
to, or hook up with, the world. Reference
presupposes successful reference, or, in
other words, for certain expressions to be
meaningful, to purport to refer, some of
them (all of them?) must genuinely refer.
Some simple sentences are thus bound to be
true. But now Forrai's answer to the problem
of reference can be used to refute a kind
of skepticism. Global skepticism asserts
the possibility that we might be wholly cut
off from the world, that everything (more
or less) that we believe might be false.
But if reference is a function of successful
reference, and truth, alá Tarksi, is a function
of reference, then a good number, though
perhaps not most or even many, of our beliefs
must be true. Global skepticism is thereby
undermined. And this, Forrai thinks, is another
(or maybe just an extension of the same)
virtue of internal realism, for it is not
a move available to the metaphysical realist.
One can thus see why internal realism might
be an attractive view. But it might be attractive
not so much on its own merits, but rather
in virtue of being an alternative to an otherwise
unattractive theory. Forrai does not, I think,
spend enough effort trying to motivate internal
realism as a plausible view independently
of alleged defects in metaphysical realism.
Without additional reasons in favor of internal
realism, it might be possible for the metaphysical
realist to hold onto her position with certain
emendations, emendations that do not alter
the fundamental character of the view. And
I think there are at least two things the
metaphysical realist can say to the answer
the question of how the mind connects to
the world, where both involve the causal
interaction of the world with the mind. What
I have in mind are scientific realism and
content externalism.
The scientific realist says that the best
explanation of the success of science is
that its categories and concepts match up,
or at least approximately match up, to the
real structure of the world. Scientific realism
sees the progress of science as something
like evolution. Species that hang around
fit their environments, even if, ontologically,
they are distinct from their environments.
Likewise, the scientific realist supposes
that the best explanation for why our theories
work, theories that are ontologically independent
of the world they are about, is because they
are not causally independent of the world.
Similar moves can be made to talk about our
words, concepts, or conceptual schemes, moves
that can be, and have been, said in reply
to the global skeptic. Though our thoughts
are ontologically independent of the world,
we believe what we do because a lot of them
turn out to be true, and their being true
is what explains why we are able to navigate
a world whose causal impact on us never ceases.
Now, it should be stressed, none of this
implies that we can get out of our minds
and directly compare the way the world is
with what we believe and see if they match.
None of this implies that we can take up
the God's eye point of view and see whether
the world is the way we believe it to be,
even if, as Forrai and others have suggested,
metaphysical realism implies the possibility
of such a point of view. Rather what it implies
is that the way the world is just might explain
the way our minds are, even if the relationship
between the two is contingent, and not, as
the internal realist would have it, necessary.
Causation might be just what the metaphysical
realist needs to rebut internal realist objections.
Causation can explain successful reference
and also, possibly, rebut the global skeptic.
I think Forrai, and others attracted to internal
realism, would probably think that the appeal
to causation just sketched will not really
eliminate the worry that on the metaphysical
realist view the successful matching of mind
and world looks like a miracle. As for me,
I think it certainly undermines the thought
that it must be a miracle. After all, it
may seem a miracle that humans exist with
such complex organs and so on. But once we
see that we evolved over many centuries it
might not be so hard to see that complexity
might just arise in a non-miraculous fashion.
If we are causally embedded in a world, it
shouldn't be a surprise that we succeed in
referring to the world. (The argument may
not prove metaphysical realism and thereby
refute internal realism, but that is another
matter.) But be this as it may, is there
something stronger that the metaphysical
realist might appeal to? I think there is,
and again causation is involved. But this
time instead of causation between mind and
world simply preferring or selecting one
set of concepts to another, causation between
mind and world will constitute or individuate
our concepts. What I have in mind is content
externalism.
According to content externalism, put rather
crudely, the world ontologically, and not
just causally, (at least partially) determines
the mind. Content externalism has it that
the world is ontologically independent of
the mind; its structures and categories are
there well before our arrival on the scene.
The mind, however, is not so ontologically
independent: the concepts that populate the
mind, or at least the simple concepts that
compose the parts of many other concepts,
are the result of causal interaction with
the world, either through evolution, learning,
or both. We wouldn't have concepts for certain
shapes and colors, certain sounds and smells,
certain edibles and predators, unless we
causally interacted with those things. Here
the world determines the mind. Such a view
can be found in the work of Hilary Putnam,
Tyler Burge, Fred Dretske, Ruth Millikan,
Jerry Fodor, and others. Content externalism,
as I see it, is the mirror image of internal
realism. According to internal realism, the
mind is somehow or other ontologically fixed
independently of the world, and then the
world derives its nature and structure from
the mind. The content externalist reverses
the order of explanation. The world is somehow
or other ontologically fixed independently
of the mind, and then the mind derives a
number of its concepts and categories from
its causal interaction with the world. And,
like the internal realist, the content externalist
says it is neither a mystery why many of
our concepts should refer to the world, nor
is it possible that all of our judgments
should turn out to be false. The problem
of reference is solved, and the global skeptic
is refuted. Of course all of this is put
crudely and sloppily and content externalists
do not agree on a number of important details.
But the point, I hope, is clear enough.
Is content externalism compatible with metaphysical
realism? I think the answer is yes, insofar
as what is central to metaphysical realism
is the idea that the structure of the world
is ontologically independent of us. And content
externalists seem to think it is compatible.
Milikan, in fact, has argued in print that
it is, and other well-known externalists
have told me in conversation that they think
it must be. And if it is compatible, then
it does not seem that the problems of reference
and skepticism motivate the rejection of
metaphysical realism in favor of internal
realism. Forrai may be right that there must
be some individuative connection between
mind and world, but it does not seem to me
that Forrai has offered any reason to suppose
it should go in the mind to world direction,
the internal realist direction, and not in
the world to mind direction. Indeed, if there
is a real weakness of the book, it is the
failure to see this possibility. When Forrai
does discuss content externalism, it consists
in either trying to show that Fodor's version
is not terribly plausible (with which I whole-heartedly
agree; Fodor's view is not, I think, representative)
or in trying to show that content externalism
is compatible with internal realism (which
seems strange; if the world determines the
mind, then why should the mind determine
the world?). Now whether or not Fodor's view
is any good, and whether or not externalism
is compatible with internal realism, what
really matters is whether or not content
externalism undermines the rational for internal
realism in that it provides a way out for
the metaphysical realist, a possibility that
Forrai, I think, has missed.
There are, then, at least two possible ways
out for the metaphysical realist, and Forrai
is not, I think, sufficiently convincing
when responding the first, scientific realist
kind of answer, and completely misses the
force of the second.
Forrai's book is very well organized and
covers a great deal of material in contemporary
metaphysics and epistemology. It's a very
useful treatment of the debate between the
internal realist and the metaphysical realist,
and the account of conceptual schemes and
their adequacy is a welcome contribution.
The book falls within the recent resurgence
of pragmatist thinking on number of central
issues in philosophy, including reference,
truth, knowledge and justification. Though
I am generally sympathetic to pragmatism,
especially about questions of justification
and rationality, I'm not sure the best way
to advance the pragmatist cause is to give
up on the traditional metaphysical realist
account of objectivity and independence.
[*] Online at Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews,
http://ndpr.icaap.org/content/archives/2002/2/graham-forrai.html
[+] Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2001, 150
pp., Synthese Library, Studies in Epistemology,
Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science,
Volume 296, $49.00, ISBN 0-7923-6885-1
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