{"id":67307,"date":"2016-02-10T01:44:50","date_gmt":"2016-02-10T06:44:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/rationalism-vs-empiricism-stanford-encyclopedia-of\/"},"modified":"2016-02-10T01:44:50","modified_gmt":"2016-02-10T06:44:50","slug":"rationalism-vs-empiricism-stanford-encyclopedia-of","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/rationalism\/rationalism-vs-empiricism-stanford-encyclopedia-of\/","title":{"rendered":"Rationalism vs. Empiricism (Stanford Encyclopedia of &#8230;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    The dispute between rationalism and empiricism takes place    within epistemology, the branch of philosophy devoted to    studying the nature, sources and limits of knowledge. The    defining questions of epistemology include the following.  <\/p>\n<p>        What is the nature of propositional knowledge, knowledge        that a particular proposition about the world is true?      <\/p>\n<p>        To know a proposition, we must believe it and it must be        true, but something more is required, something that        distinguishes knowledge from a lucky guess. Let's call this        additional element warrant. A good deal of philosophical        work has been invested in trying to determine the nature of        warrant.      <\/p>\n<p>        How can we gain knowledge?      <\/p>\n<p>        We can form true beliefs just by making lucky guesses. How        to gain warranted beliefs is less clear. Moreover, to know        the world, we must think about it, and it is unclear how we        gain the concepts we use in thought or what assurance, if        any, we have that the ways in which we divide up the world        using our concepts correspond to divisions that actually        exist.      <\/p>\n<p>        What are the limits of our knowledge?      <\/p>\n<p>        Some aspects of the world may be within the limits of our        thought but beyond the limits of our knowledge; faced with        competing descriptions of them, we cannot know which        description is true. Some aspects of the world may even be        beyond the limits of our thought, so that we cannot form        intelligible descriptions of them, let alone know that a        particular description is true.      <\/p>\n<p>    The disagreement between rationalists and empiricists primarily    concerns the second question, regarding the sources of our    concepts and knowledge. In some instances, their disagreement    on this topic leads them to give conflicting responses to the    other questions as well. They may disagree over the nature of    warrant or about the limits of our thought and knowledge. Our    focus here will be on the competing rationalist and empiricist    responses to the second question.  <\/p>\n<p>    To be a rationalist is to adopt at least one of three claims.    The Intuition\/Deduction thesis concerns how we become warranted    in believing propositions in a particular subject area.  <\/p>\n<p>    Intuition is a form of rational insight. Intellectually    grasping a proposition, we just see it to be true in such a    way as to form a true, warranted belief in it. (As discussed in    Section 2 below, the nature of this intellectual seeing needs    explanation.) Deduction is a process in which we derive    conclusions from intuited premises through valid arguments,    ones in which the conclusion must be true if the premises are    true. We intuit, for example, that the number three is prime    and that it is greater than two. We then deduce from this    knowledge that there is a prime number greater than two.    Intuition and deduction thus provide us with knowledge a    priori, which is to say knowledge gained independently of    sense experience.  <\/p>\n<p>    We can generate different versions of the Intuition\/Deduction    thesis by substituting different subject areas for the variable    S. Some rationalists take mathematics to be knowable by    intuition and deduction. Some place ethical truths in this    category. Some include metaphysical claims, such as that God    exists, we have free will, and our mind and body are distinct    substances. The more propositions rationalists include within    the range of intuition and deduction, and the more    controversial the truth of those propositions or the claims to    know them, the more radical their rationalism.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rationalists also vary the strength of their view by adjusting    their understanding of warrant. Some take warranted beliefs to    be beyond even the slightest doubt and claim that intuition and    deduction provide beliefs of this high epistemic status. Others    interpret warrant more conservatively, say as belief beyond a    reasonable doubt, and claim that intuition and deduction    provide beliefs of that caliber. Still another dimension of    rationalism depends on how its proponents understand the    connection between intuition, on the one hand, and truth, on    the other. Some take intuition to be infallible, claiming that    whatever we intuit must be true. Others allow for the    possibility of false intuited propositions.  <\/p>\n<p>    The second thesis associated with rationalism is the Innate    Knowledge thesis.  <\/p>\n<p>    Like the Intuition\/Deduction thesis, the Innate Knowledge    thesis asserts the existence of knowledge gained a    priori, independently of experience. The difference    between them rests in the accompanying understanding of how    this a priori knowledge is gained. The    Intuition\/Deduction thesis cites intuition and subsequent    deductive reasoning. The Innate Knowledge thesis offers our    rational nature. Our innate knowledge is not learned through    either sense experience or intuition and deduction. It is just    part of our nature. Experiences may trigger a process by which    we bring this knowledge to consciousness, but the experiences    do not provide us with the knowledge itself. It has in some way    been with us all along. According to some rationalists, we    gained the knowledge in an earlier existence. According to    others, God provided us with it at creation. Still others say    it is part of our nature through natural selection.  <\/p>\n<p>    We get different versions of the Innate Knowledge thesis by    substituting different subject areas for the variable S'. Once    again, the more subjects included within the range of the    thesis or the more controversial the claim to have knowledge in    them, the more radical the form of rationalism. Stronger and    weaker understandings of warrant yield stronger and weaker    versions of the thesis as well.  <\/p>\n<p>    The third important thesis of rationalism is the Innate Concept    thesis.  <\/p>\n<p>    According to the Innate Concept thesis, some of our concepts    are not gained from experience. They are part of our rational    nature in such a way that, while sense experiences may trigger    a process by which they are brought to consciousness,    experience does not provide the concepts or determine the    information they contain. Some claim that the Innate Concept    thesis is entailed by the Innate Knowledge Thesis; a particular    instance of knowledge can only be innate if the concepts that    are contained in the known proposition are also innate. This is    Locke's position (1690, Book I, Chapter IV, Section 1, p. 91).    Others, such as Carruthers, argue against this connection    (1992, pp. 5354). The content and strength of the Innate    Concept thesis varies with the concepts claimed to be innate.    The more a concept seems removed from experience and the mental    operations we can perform on experience the more plausibly it    may be claimed to be innate. Since we do not experience perfect    triangles but do experience pains, our concept of the former is    a more promising candidate for being innate than our concept of    the latter.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Intuition\/Deduction thesis, the Innate Knowledge thesis,    and the Innate Concept thesis are essential to rationalism: to    be a rationalist is to adopt at least one of them. Two other    closely related theses are generally adopted by rationalists,    although one can certainly be a rationalist without adopting    either of them. The first is that experience cannot provide    what we gain from reason.  <\/p>\n<p>    The second is that reason is superior to experience as a source    of knowledge.  <\/p>\n<p>    How reason is superior needs explanation, and rationalists have    offered different accounts. One view, generally associated with    Descartes (1628, Rules II and III, pp. 14), is that what we    know a priori is certain, beyond even the slightest    doubt, while what we believe, or even know, on the basis of    sense experience is at least somewhat uncertain. Another view,    generally associated with Plato (Republic 479e-484c),    locates the superiority of a priori knowledge in the    objects known. What we know by reason alone, a Platonic form,    say, is superior in an important metaphysical way, e.g.    unchanging, eternal, perfect, a higher degree of being, to what    we are aware of through sense experience.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most forms of rationalism involve notable commitments to other    philosophical positions. One is a commitment to the denial of    scepticism for at least some area of knowledge. If we claim to    know some truths by intuition or deduction or to have some    innate knowledge, we obviously reject scepticism with regard to    those truths. Rationalism in the form of the    Intuition\/Deduction thesis is also committed to epistemic    foundationalism, the view that we know some truths without    basing our belief in them on any others and that we then use    this foundational knowledge to know more truths.  <\/p>\n<p>    Empiricists endorse the following claim for some subject area.  <\/p>\n<p>    Empiricism about a particular subject rejects the corresponding    version of the Intuition\/Deduction thesis and Innate Knowledge    thesis. Insofar as we have knowledge in the subject, our    knowledge is a posteriori, dependent upon sense    experience. Empiricists also deny the implication of the    corresponding Innate Concept thesis that we have innate ideas    in the subject area. Sense experience is our only source of    ideas. They reject the corresponding version of the Superiority    of Reason thesis. Since reason alone does not give us any    knowledge, it certainly does not give us superior knowledge.    Empiricists generally reject the Indispensability of Reason    thesis, though they need not. The Empiricism thesis does not    entail that we have empirical knowledge. It entails that    knowledge can only be gained, if at all, by    experience. Empiricists may assert, as some do for some    subjects, that the rationalists are correct to claim that    experience cannot give us knowledge. The conclusion they draw    from this rationalist lesson is that we do not know at all.  <\/p>\n<p>    I have stated the basic claims of rationalism and empiricism so    that each is relative to a particular subject area. Rationalism    and empiricism, so relativized, need not conflict. We can be    rationalists in mathematics or a particular area of mathematics    and empiricists in all or some of the physical sciences.    Rationalism and empiricism only conflict when formulated to    cover the same subject. Then the debate, Rationalism vs.    Empiricism, is joined. The fact that philosophers can be both    rationalists and empiricists has implications for the    classification schemes often employed in the history of    philosophy, especially the one traditionally used to describe    the Early Modern Period of the seventeenth and eighteenth    centuries leading up to Kant. It is standard practice to group    the major philosophers of this period as either rationalists or    empiricists and to suggest that those under one heading share a    common agenda in opposition to those under the other. Thus,    Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz are the Continental Rationalists    in opposition to Locke, Berkeley and Hume, the British    Empiricists. We should adopt such general classification    schemes with caution. The views of the individual philosophers    are more subtle and complex than the simple-minded    classification suggests. (See Loeb (1981) and Kenny (1986) for    important discussions of this point.) Locke rejects rationalism    in the form of any version of the Innate Knowledge or Innate    Concept theses, but he nonetheless adopts the    Intuition\/Deduction thesis with regard to our knowledge of    God's existence. Descartes and Locke have remarkably similar    views on the nature of our ideas, even though Descartes takes    many to be innate, while Locke ties them all to experience. The    rationalist\/empiricist classification also encourages us to    expect the philosophers on each side of the divide to have    common research programs in areas beyond epistemology. Thus,    Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz are mistakenly seen as applying    a reason-centered epistemology to a common metaphysical agenda,    with each trying to improve on the efforts of the one before,    while Locke, Berkeley and Hume are mistakenly seen as gradually    rejecting those metaphysical claims, with each consciously    trying to improve on the efforts of his predecessors. It is    also important to note that the rationalist\/empiricist    distinction is not exhaustive of the possible sources of    knowledge. One might claim, for example, that we can gain    knowledge in a particular area by a form of Divine revelation    or insight that is a product of neither reason nor sense    experience. In short, when used carelessly, the labels    rationalist and empiricist, as well as the slogan that is    the title of this essay, Rationalism vs. Empiricism, can    retard rather than advance our understanding.  <\/p>\n<p>    Nonetheless, an important debate properly described as    Rationalism vs. Empiricism is joined whenever the claims for    each view are formulated to cover the same subject. What is    perhaps the most interesting form of the debate occurs when we    take the relevant subject to be truths about the external    world, the world beyond our own minds. A full-fledged    rationalist with regard to our knowledge of the external world    holds that some external world truths can and must be known    a priori, that some of the ideas required for that    knowledge are and must be innate, and that this knowledge is    superior to any that experience could ever provide. The    full-fledged empiricist about our knowledge of the external    world replies that, when it comes to the nature of the world    beyond our own minds, experience is our sole source of    information. Reason might inform us of the relations among our    ideas, but those ideas themselves can only be gained, and any    truths about the external reality they represent can only be    known, on the basis of sense experience. This debate concerning    our knowledge of the external world will generally be our main    focus in what follows.  <\/p>\n<p>    Historically, the rationalist\/empiricist dispute in    epistemology has extended into the area of metaphysics, where    philosophers are concerned with the basic nature of reality,    including the existence of God and such aspects of our nature    as freewill and the relation between the mind and body. Major    rationalists (e.g., Descartes 1641) have presented metaphysical    theories, which they have claimed to know by reason alone.    Major empiricists (e.g., Hume 173940) have rejected the    theories as either speculation, beyond what we can learn from    experience, or nonsensical attempts to describe aspects of the    world beyond the concepts experience can provide. The debate    raises the issue of metaphysics as an area of knowledge. Kant    puts the driving assumption clearly:  <\/p>\n<p>    The possibility then of metaphysics so understood, as an area    of human knowledge, hinges on how we resolve the    rationalist\/empiricist debate. The debate also extends into    ethics. Some moral objectivists (e.g., Ross 1930) take us to    know some fundamental objective moral truths by intuition,    while some moral skeptics, who reject such knowledge, (e.g.,    Mackie 1977) find the appeal to a faculty of moral intuition    utterly implausible. More recently, the rationalist\/empiricist    debate has extended to discussions (e.g., Bealer 1999 and    Alexander & Weinberg 2007) of the very nature of    philosophical inquiry: to what extent are philosophical    questions to be answered by appeals to reason or experience?  <\/p>\n<p>    The Intuition\/Deduction thesis claims that we can know some    propositions by intuition and still more by deduction. Many    empiricists (e.g., Hume 1748) have been willing to accept the    thesis so long as it is restricted to propositions solely about    the relations among our own concepts. We can, they agree, know    by intuition that our concept of God includes our concept of    omniscience. Just by examining the concepts, we can    intellectually grasp that the one includes the other. The    debate between rationalists and empiricists is joined when the    former assert, and the latter deny, the Intuition\/Deduction    thesis with regard to propositions that contain substantive    information about the external world. Rationalists, such as    Descartes, have claimed that we can know by intuition and    deduction that God exists and created the world, that our mind    and body are distinct substances, and that the angles of a    triangle equal two right angles, where all of these claims are    truths about an external reality independent of our thought.    Such substantive versions of the Intuition\/Deduction thesis are    our concern in this section.  <\/p>\n<p>    One defense of the Intuition\/Deduction thesis assumes that we    know some substantive external world truths, adds an analysis    of what knowledge requires, and concludes that our knowledge    must result from intuition and deduction. Descartes claims that    knowledge requires certainty and that certainty about the    external world is beyond what empirical evidence can provide.    We can never be sure our sensory impressions are not part of a    dream or a massive, demon orchestrated, deception. Only    intuition and deduction can provide the certainty needed for    knowledge, and, given that we have some substantive knowledge    of the external world, the Intuition\/Deduction thesis is true.    As Descartes tells us, all knowledge is certain and evident    cognition (1628, Rule II, p. 1) and when we review all the    actions of the intellect by means of which we are able to    arrive at a knowledge of things with no fear of being    mistaken, we recognize only two: intuition and deduction    (1628, Rule III, p. 3).  <\/p>\n<p>    This line of argument is one of the least compelling in the    rationalist arsenal. First, the assumption that knowledge    requires certainty comes at a heavy cost, as it rules out so    much of what we commonly take ourselves to know. Second, as    many contemporary rationalists accept, intuition is not always    a source of certain knowledge. The possibility of a deceiver    gives us a reason to doubt our intuitions as well as our    empirical beliefs. For all we know, a deceiver might cause us    to intuit false propositions, just as one might cause us to    have perceptions of nonexistent objects. Descartes's classic    way of meeting this challenge in the Meditations is to    argue that we can know with certainty that no such deceiver    interferes with our intuitions and deductions. They are    infallible, as God guarantees their truth. The problem, known    as the Cartesian Circle, is that Descartes's account of how we    gain this knowledge begs the question, by attempting to deduce    the conclusion that all our intuitions are true from intuited    premises. Moreover, his account does not touch a remaining    problem that he himself notes (1628, Rule VII, p. 7):    Deductions of any appreciable length rely on our fallible    memory.  <\/p>\n<p>    A more plausible argument for the Intuition\/Deduction thesis    again assumes that we know some particular, external world    truths, and then appeals to the nature of what we know, rather    than to the nature of knowledge itself, to argue that our    knowledge must result from intuition and deduction. Leibniz    (1704) tells us the following.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz goes on to describe our mathematical knowledge as    innate, and his argument may be directed to support the    Innate Knowledge thesis rather than the Intuition\/Deduction    thesis. For our purposes here, we can relate it to the latter,    however: We have substantive knowledge about the external world    in mathematics, and what we know in that area, we know to be    necessarily true. Experience cannot warrant beliefs about what    is necessarily the case. Hence, experience cannot be the source    of our knowledge. The best explanation of our knowledge is that    we gain it by intuition and deduction. Leibniz mentions logic,    metaphysics and morals as other areas in which our knowledge    similarly outstrips what experience can provide. Judgments in    logic and metaphysics involve forms of necessity beyond what    experience can support. Judgments in morals involve a form of    obligation or value that lies beyond experience, which only    informs us about what is the case rather than about what ought    to be.  <\/p>\n<p>    The strength of this argument varies with its examples of    purported knowledge. Insofar as we focus on controversial    claims in metaphysics, e.g., that God exists, that our mind is    a distinct substance from our body, the initial premise that we    know the claims is less than compelling. Taken with regard to    other areas, however, the argument clearly has legs. We know a    great deal of mathematics, and what we know, we know to be    necessarily true. None of our experiences warrants a belief in    such necessity, and we do not seem to base our knowledge on any    experiences. The warrant that provides us with knowledge arises    from an intellectual grasp of the propositions which is clearly    part of our learning. Similarly, we seem to have such moral    knowledge as that, all other things being equal, it is wrong to    break a promise and that pleasure is intrinsically good. No    empirical lesson about how things are can warrant such    knowledge of how they ought to be.  <\/p>\n<p>    This argument for the Intuition\/Deduction thesis raises    additional questions which rationalists must answer. Insofar as    they maintain that our knowledge of necessary truths in    mathematics or elsewhere by intuition and deduction is    substantive knowledge of the external world, they owe us an    account of this form of necessity. Many empiricists stand ready    to argue that necessity resides in the way we talk about    things, not in the things we talk about (Quine 1966, p. 174).    Similarly, if rationalists claim that our knowledge in morals    is knowledge of an objective form of obligation, they owe us an    account of how objective values are part of a world of    apparently valueless facts.  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps most of all, rationalist defenders of the    Intuition\/Deduction thesis owe us an account of what intuition    is and how it provides warranted true beliefs about the    external world. What is it to intuit a proposition and how does    that act of intuition support a warranted belief? Their    argument presents intuition and deduction as an explanation of    assumed knowledge that can'tthey saybe explained by    experience, but such an explanation by intuition and deduction    requires that we have a clear understanding of intuition and    how it supports warranted beliefs. Metaphorical    characterizations of intuition as intellectual grasping or    seeing are not enough, and if intuition is some form of    intellectual grasping, it appears that all that is grasped is    relations among our concepts, rather than facts about the    external world. Moreover, any intellectual faculty, whether it    be sense perception or intuition, provides us with warranted    beliefs only if it is generally reliable. The reliability of    sense perception stems from the causal connection between how    external objects are and how we experience them. What accounts    for the reliability of our intuitions regarding the external    world? Is our intuition of a particular true proposition the    outcome of some causal interaction between ourselves and some    aspect of the world? What aspect? What is the nature of this    causal interaction? That the number three is prime does not    appear to cause anything, let alone our intuition that it is    prime.  <\/p>\n<p>    These issues are made all the more pressing by the classic    empiricist response to the argument. The reply is generally    credited to Hume and begins with a division of all true    propositions into two categories.  <\/p>\n<p>    Intuition and deduction can provide us with knowledge of    necessary truths such as those found in mathematics and logic,    but such knowledge is not substantive knowledge of the external    world. It is only knowledge of the relations of our own ideas.    If the rationalist shifts the argument so it appeals to    knowledge in morals, Hume's reply is to offer an analysis of    our moral concepts by which such knowledge is empirically    gained knowledge of matters of fact.  <\/p>\n<p>    If the rationalist appeals to our knowledge in metaphysics to    support the argument, Hume denies that we have such knowledge.  <\/p>\n<p>    An updated version of this general empiricist reply, with an    increased emphasis on language and the nature of meaning, is    given in the twentieth-century by A. J. Ayer's version of    logical positivism. Adopting positivism's verification theory    of meaning, Ayer assigns every cognitively meaningful sentence    to one of two categories: either it is a tautology, and so true    solely by virtue of the meaning of its terms and provides no    substantive information about the world, or it is open to    empirical verification. There is, then, no room for knowledge    about the external world by intuition or deduction.  <\/p>\n<p>    The rationalists' argument for the Intuition\/Deduction thesis    goes wrong at the start, according to empiricists, by assuming    that we can have substantive knowledge of the external world    that outstrips what experience can warrant. We cannot.  <\/p>\n<p>    This empiricist reply faces challenges of its own. Our    knowledge of mathematics seems to be about something more than    our own concepts. Our knowledge of moral judgments seems to    concern not just how we feel or act but how we ought to behave.    The general principles that provide a basis for the empiricist    view, e.g. Hume's overall account of our ideas, the    Verification Principle of Meaning, are problematic in their own    right. In various formulations, the Verification Principle    fails its own test for having cognitive meaning. A careful    analysis of Hume's Inquiry, relative to its own    principles, may require us to consign large sections of it to    the flames.  <\/p>\n<p>    In all, rationalists have a strong argument for the    Intuition\/Deduction thesis relative to our substantive    knowledge of the external world, but its success rests on how    well they can answer questions about the nature and epistemic    force of intuition made all the more pressing by the classic    empiricist reply.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Innate Knowledge thesis joins the Intuition\/Deduction    thesis in asserting that we have a priori knowledge,    but it does not offer intuition and deduction as the source of    that knowledge. It takes our a priori knowledge to be    part of our rational nature. Experience may trigger our    awareness of this knowledge, but it does not provide us with    it. The knowledge is already there.  <\/p>\n<p>    Plato presents an early version of the Innate Knowledge thesis    in the Meno as the doctrine of knowledge by    recollection. The doctrine is motivated in part by a paradox    that arises when we attempt to explain the nature of inquiry.    How do we gain knowledge of a theorem in geometry? We inquire    into the matter. Yet, knowledge by inquiry seems impossible    (Meno, 80d-e). We either already know the theorem at    the start of our investigation or we do not. If we already have    the knowledge, there is no place for inquiry. If we lack the    knowledge, we don't know what we are seeking and cannot    recognize it when we find it. Either way we cannot gain    knowledge of the theorem by inquiry. Yet, we do know some    theorems.  <\/p>\n<p>    The doctrine of knowledge by recollection offers a solution.    When we inquire into the truth of a theorem, we both do and do    not already know it. We have knowledge in the form of a memory    gained from our soul's knowledge of the theorem prior to its    union with our body. We lack knowledge in that, in our soul's    unification with the body, it has forgotten the knowledge and    now needs to recollect it. In learning the theorem, we are, in    effect, recalling what we already know.  <\/p>\n<p>    Plato famously illustrates the doctrine with an exchange    between Socrates and a young slave, in which Socrates guides    the slave from ignorance to mathematical knowledge. The slave's    experiences, in the form of Socrates' questions and    illustrations, are the occasion for his recollection of what he    learned previously. Plato's metaphysics provides additional    support for the Innate Knowledge Thesis. Since our knowledge is    of abstract, eternal Forms which clearly lie beyond our sensory    experience, it is a priori.  <\/p>\n<p>    Contemporary supporters of Plato's position are scarce. The    initial paradox, which Plato describes as a trick argument    (Meno, 80e), rings sophistical. The metaphysical    assumptions in the solution need justification. The solution    does not answer the basic question: Just how did the slave's    soul learn the theorem? The Intuition\/Deduction thesis offers    an equally, if not more, plausible account of how the slave    gains knowledge a priori. Nonetheless, Plato's    position illustrates the kind of reasoning that has caused many    philosophers to adopt some form of the Innate Knowledge thesis.    We are confident that we know certain propositions about the    external world, but there seems to be no adequate explanation    of how we gained this knowledge short of saying that it is    innate. Its content is beyond what we directly gain in    experience, as well as what we can gain by performing mental    operations on what experience provides. It does not seem to be    based on an intuition or deduction. That it is innate in us    appears to be the best explanation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Noam Chomsky argues along similar lines in presenting what he    describes as a rationalist conception of the nature of    language (1975, p. 129). Chomsky argues that the experiences    available to language learners are far too sparse to account    for their knowledge of their language. To explain language    acquisition, we must assume that learners have an innate    knowledge of a universal grammar capturing the common deep    structure of natural languages. It is important to note that    Chomsky's language learners do not know particular propositions    describing a universal grammar. They have a set of innate    capacities or dispositions which enable and determine their    language development. Chomsky gives us a theory of innate    learning capacities or structures rather than a theory of    innate knowledge. His view does not support the Innate    Knowledge thesis as rationalists have traditionally understood    it. As one commentator puts it, Chomsky's principles  are    innate neither in the sense that we are explicitly aware of    them, nor in the sense that we have a disposition to recognize    their truth as obvious under appropriate circumstances. And    hence it is by no means clear that Chomsky is correct in seeing    his theory as following the traditional rationalist account of    the acquisition of knowledge (Cottingham 1984, p. 124).  <\/p>\n<p>    Peter Carruthers (1992) argues that we have innate knowledge of    the principles of folk-psychology. Folk-psychology is a network    of common-sense generalizations that hold independently of    context or culture and concern the relationships of mental    states to one another, to the environment and states of the    body and to behavior (1992, p. 115). It includes such beliefs    as that pains tend to be caused by injury, that pains tend to    prevent us from concentrating on tasks, and that perceptions    are generally caused by the appropriate state of the    environment. Carruthers notes the complexity of    folk-psychology, along with its success in explaining our    behavior and the fact that its explanations appeal to such    unobservables as beliefs, desires, feelings and thoughts. He    argues that the complexity, universality and depth of    folk-psychological principles outstrips what experience can    provide, especially to young children who by their fifth year    already know a great many of them. This knowledge is also not    the result of intuition or deduction; folk-psychological    generalizations are not seen to be true in an act of    intellectual insight. Carruthers concludes, [The problem]    concerning the child's acquisition of psychological    generalizations cannot be solved, unless we suppose that much    of folk-psychology is already innate, triggered locally by the    child's experience of itself and others, rather than learned    (1992, p. 121).  <\/p>\n<p>    Empiricists, and some rationalists, attack the Innate Knowledge    thesis in two main ways. First, they offer accounts of how    sense experience or intuition and deduction provide the    knowledge that is claimed to be innate. Second, they directly    criticize the Innate Knowledge thesis itself. The classic    statement of this second line of attack is presented in Locke    1690. Locke raises the issue of just what innate knowledge is.    Particular instances of knowledge are supposed to be in our    minds as part of our rational make-up, but how are they in our    minds? If the implication is that we all consciously have this    knowledge, it is plainly false. Propositions often given as    examples of innate knowledge, even such plausible candidates as    the principle that the same thing cannot both be and not be,    are not consciously accepted by children and those with severe    cognitive limitations. If the point of calling such principles    innate is not to imply that they are or have been consciously    accepted by all rational beings, then it is hard to see what    the point is. No proposition can be said to be in the mind,    which it never yet knew, which it never yet was conscious of    (1690, Book I, Chapter II, Section 5, p. 61). Proponents of    innate knowledge might respond that some knowledge is innate in    that we have the capacity to have it. That claim, while true,    is of little interest, however. If the capacity of knowing, be    the natural impression contended for, all the truths a man ever    comes to know, will, by this account, be every one of them,    innate; and this great point will amount to no more, but only    an improper way of speaking; which whilst it pretends to assert    the contrary, says nothing different from those, who deny    innate principles. For nobody, I think, ever denied, that the    mind was capable of knowing several truths (1690, Book I,    Chapter II, Section 5, p. 61). Locke thus challenges defenders    of the Innate Knowledge thesis to present an account of innate    knowledge that allows their position to be both true and    interesting. A narrow interpretation of innateness faces    counterexamples of rational individuals who do not meet its    conditions. A generous interpretation implies that all our    knowledge, even that clearly provided by experience, is innate.  <\/p>\n<p>    Defenders of innate knowledge take up Locke's challenge.    Leibniz responds (1704) by appealing to an account of    innateness in terms of natural potential to avoid Locke's    dilemma. Consider Peter Carruthers' similar reply.  <\/p>\n<p>    Carruthers claims that our innate knowledge is determined    through evolutionary selection (p. 111). Evolution has resulted    in our being determined to know certain things (e.g. principles    of folk-psychology) at particular stages of our life, as part    of our natural development. Experiences provide the occasion    for our consciously believing the known propositions but not    the basis for our knowledge of them (p. 52). Carruthers thus    has a ready reply to Locke's counterexamples of children and    cognitively limited persons who do not believe propositions    claimed to be instances of innate knowledge. The former have    not yet reached the proper stage of development; the latter are    persons in whom natural development has broken down (pp.    4950).  <\/p>\n<p>    A serious problem for the Innate Knowledge thesis remains,    however. We know a proposition only if it is true, we believe    it and our belief is warranted. Rationalists who assert the    existence of innate knowledge are not just claiming that, as a    matter of human evolution, God's design or some other factor,    at a particular point in our development, certain sorts of    experiences trigger our belief in particular propositions in a    way that does not involve our learning them from the    experiences. Their claim is even bolder: In at least some of    these cases, our empirically triggered, but not empirically    warranted, belief is nonetheless warranted and so known. How    can these beliefs be warranted if they do not gain their    warrant from the experiences that cause us to have them or from    intuition and deduction?  <\/p>\n<p>    Some rationalists think that a reliabilist account of warrant    provides the answer. According to Reliabilism, beliefs are    warranted if they are formed by a process that generally    produces true beliefs rather than false ones. The true beliefs    that constitute our innate knowledge are warranted, then,    because they are formed as the result of a reliable    belief-forming process. Carruthers maintains that Innate    beliefs will count as known provided that the process through    which they come to be innate is a reliable one (provided, that    is, that the process tends to generate beliefs that are true)    (1992, p. 77). He argues that natural selection results in the    formation of some beliefs and is a truth-reliable process.  <\/p>\n<p>    An appeal to Reliabilism, or a similar causal theory of    warrant, may well be the best way for rationalists to develop    the Innate Knowledge thesis. They have a difficult row to hoe,    however. First, such accounts of warrant are themselves quite    controversial. Second, rationalists must give an account of    innate knowledge that maintains and explains the distinction    between innate knowledge and a posteriori knowledge,    and it is not clear that they will be able to do so within such    an account of warrant. Suppose for the sake of argument that we    have innate knowledge of some proposition, P. What makes    our knowledge that P innate? To sharpen the question,    what difference between our knowledge that P and a clear    case of a posteriori knowledge, say our knowledge that    something is red based on our current visual experience of a    red table, makes the former innate and the latter not innate?    In each case, we have a true, warranted belief. In each case,    presumably, our belief gains its warrant from the fact that it    meets a particular causal condition, e.g., it is produced by a    reliable process. In each case, the causal process is one in    which an experience causes us to believe the proposition at    hand (that P; that something is red), for, as defenders    of innate knowledge admit, our belief that P is    triggered by an experience, as is our belief that something    is red. The insight behind the Innate Knowledge thesis seems to    be that the difference between our innate and a    posteriori knowledge lies in the relation between our    experience and our belief in each case. The experience that    causes our belief that P does not contain the    information that P, while our visual experience of a red    table does contain the information that something is red.    Yet, exactly what is the nature of this containment relation    between our experiences, on the one hand, and what we believe,    on the other, that is missing in the one case but present in    the other? The nature of the experience-belief relation seems    quite similar in each. The causal relation between the    experience that triggers our belief that P and our    belief that P is contingent, as is the fact that the    belief-forming process is reliable. The same is true of our    experience of a red table and our belief that something is red.    The causal relation between the experience and our belief is    again contingent. We might have been so constructed that the    experience we describe as being appeared to redly caused us    to believe, not that something is red, but that something is    hot. The process that takes us from the experince to our belief    is also only contingently reliable. Moreover, if our experience    of a red table contains the information that something is    red, then that fact, not the existence of a reliable    belief-forming process between the two, should be the reason    why the experience warrants our belief. By appealing to    Reliablism, or some other causal theory of warrant,    rationalists may obtain a way to explain how innate knowledge    can be warranted. They still need to show how their explanation    supports an account of the difference between innate knowledge    and a posteriori knowledge.  <\/p>\n<p>    According to the Innate Concept thesis, some of our concepts    have not been gained from experience. They are instead part of    our rational make-up, and experience simply triggers a process    by which we consciously grasp them. The main concern motivating    the rationalist should be familiar by now: the content of some    concepts seems to outstrip anything we could have gained from    experience. An example of this reasoning is presented by    Descartes in the Meditations. Descartes classifies our    ideas as adventitious, invented by us, and innate. Adventitious    ideas, such as a sensation of heat, are gained directly through    sense experience. Ideas invented by us, such as our idea of a    hippogriff, are created by us from other ideas we possess.    Innate ideas, such as our ideas of God, of extended matter, of    substance and of a perfect triangle, are placed in our minds by    God at creation. Consider Descartes's argument that our concept    of God, as an infinitely perfect being, is innate. Our concept    of God is not directly gained in experience, as particular    tastes, sensations and mental images might be. Its content is    beyond what we could ever construct by applying available    mental operations to what experience directly provides. From    experience, we can gain the concept of a being with finite    amounts of various perfections, one, for example, that is    finitely knowledgeable, powerful and good. We cannot however    move from these empirical concepts to the concept of a being of    infinite perfection. (I must not think that, just as my    conceptions of rest and darkness are arrived at by negating    movement and light, so my perception of the infinite is arrived    at not by means of a true idea but by merely negating the    finite, Third Meditation, p. 94.) Descartes supplements this    argument by another. Not only is the content of our concept of    God beyond what experience can provide, the concept is a    prerequisite for our employment of the concept of finite    perfection gained from experience. (My perception of the    infinite, that is God, is in some way prior to my perception of    the finite, that is myself. For how could I understand that I    doubted or desiredthat is lacked somethingand that I was not    wholly perfect, unless there were in me some idea of a more    perfect being which enabled me to recognize my own defects by    comparison, Third Meditation, p. 94).  <\/p>\n<p>    An empiricist response to this general line of argument is    given by Locke (1690, Book I, Chapter IV, Sections 125, pp.    91107). First, there is the problem of explaining what it is    for someone to have an innate concept. If having an innate    concept entails consciously entertaining it at present or in    the past, then Descartes's position is open to obvious    counterexamples. Young children and people from other cultures    do not consciously entertain the concept of God and have not    done so. Second, there is the objection that we have no need to    appeal to innate concepts in the first place. Contrary to    Descartes' argument, we can explain how experience provides all    our ideas, including those the rationalists take to be innate,    and with just the content that the rationalists attribute to    them.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz (1704) offers a rationalist reply to the first concern.    Where Locke puts forth the image of the mind as a blank tablet    on which experience writes, Leibniz offers us the image of a    block of marble, the veins of which determine what sculpted    figures it will accept.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz's metaphor contains an insight that Locke misses. The    mind plays a role in determining the nature of its contents.    This point does not, however, require the adoption of the    Innate Concept thesis.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rationalists have responded to the second part of the    empiricist attack on the Innate Concept thesisthe empricists'    claim that the thesis is without basis, as all our ideas can be    explained as derived from experienceby focusing on    difficulties in the empiricists' attempts to give such an    explanation. The difficulties are illustrated by Locke's    account. According to Locke, experience consists in external    sensation and inner reflection. All our ideas are either simple    or complex, with the former being received by us passively in    sensation or reflection and the latter being built by the mind    from simple materials through various mental operations. Right    at the start, the account of how simple ideas are gained is    open to an obvious counterexample acknowledged, but then set    aside, by Hume in presenting his own empiricist theory.    Consider the mental image of a particular shade of blue. If    Locke is right, the idea is a simple one and should be    passively received by the mind through experience. Hume points    out otherwise.  <\/p>\n<p>    Even when it comes to such simple ideas as the image of a    particular shade of blue, the mind is more than a blank slate    on which experience writes.  <\/p>\n<p>    Consider too our concept of a particular color, say red.    Critics of Locke's account have pointed out the weaknesses in    his explanation of how we gain such a concept by the mental    operation of abstraction on individual cases. For one thing, it    makes the incorrect assumption that various instances of a    particular concept share a common feature. Carruthers puts the    objection as follows.  <\/p>\n<p>    For another thing, Locke's account of concept acquisition from    particular experiences seems circular.  <\/p>\n<p>    Consider in this regard Locke's account of how we gain our    concept of causation.  <\/p>\n<p>    We get our concept of causation from our observation that some    things receive their existence from the application and    operation of some other things. Yet, we cannot make this    observation unless we already have the concept of causation.    Locke's account of how we gain our idea of power displays a    similar circularity.  <\/p>\n<p>    We come by the idea of power though considering the possibility    of changes in our ideas made by experiences and our own    choices. Yet, to consider this possibilityof some things    making a change in otherswe must already have a    concept of power.  <\/p>\n<p>    One way to meet at least some of these challenges to an    empiricist account of the origin of our concepts is to revise    our understanding of the content of our concepts so as to bring    them more in line with what experience will clearly provide.    Hume famously takes this approach. Beginning in a way    reminiscent of Locke, he distinguishes between two forms of    mental contents or perceptions, as he calls them: impressions    and ideas. Impressions are the contents of our current    experiences: our sensations, feelings, emotions, desires, and    so on. Ideas are mental contents derived from impressions.    Simple ideas are copies of impressions; complex ideas are    derived from impressions by compounding, transposing,    augmenting or diminishing them. Given that all our ideas are    thus gained from experience, Hume offers us the following    method for determining the content of any idea and thereby the    meaning of any term taken to express it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Using this test, Hume draws out one of the most important    implications of the empiricists' denial of the Innate Concept    thesis. If experience is indeed the source of all ideas, then    our experiences also determine the content of our ideas. Our    ideas of causation, of substance, of right and wrong have their    content determined by the experiences that provide them. Those    experiences, Hume argues, are unable to support the content    that many rationalists and some empiricists, such as Locke,    attribute to the corresponding ideas. Our inability to explain    how some concepts, with the contents the rationalists attribute    to them, are gained from experience should not lead us to adopt    the Innate Concept thesis. It should lead us to accept a more    limited view of the contents for those concepts, and thereby a    more limited view of our ability to describe and understand the    world.  <\/p>\n<p>    Consider, for example, our idea of causation. Descartes takes    it to be innate. Locke offers an apparently circular account of    how it is gained from experience. Hume's empiricist account    severely limits its content. Our idea of causation is derived    from a feeling of expectation rooted in our experiences of the    constant conjunction of similar causes and effects.  <\/p>\n<p>    The source of our idea in experience determines its content.  <\/p>\n<p>    Our claims, and any knowledge we may have, about causal    connections in the world turn out, given the limited content of    our empirically based concept of causation, to be claims and    knowledge about the constant conjunction of events and our own    feelings of expectation. Thus, the initial disagreement between    rationalists and empiricists about the source of our ideas    leads to one about their content and thereby the content of our    descriptions and knowledge of the world.  <\/p>\n<p>    Like philosophical debates generally, the    rationalist\/empiricist debate ultimately concerns our position    in the world, in this case our position as rational inquirers.    To what extent do our faculties of reason and experience    support our attempts to know and understand our situation?  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read more: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/plato.stanford.edu\/entries\/rationalism-empiricism\/\" title=\"Rationalism vs. Empiricism (Stanford Encyclopedia of ...\">Rationalism vs. Empiricism (Stanford Encyclopedia of ...<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> The dispute between rationalism and empiricism takes place within epistemology, the branch of philosophy devoted to studying the nature, sources and limits of knowledge.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/rationalism\/rationalism-vs-empiricism-stanford-encyclopedia-of\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187714],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-67307","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-rationalism"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/67307"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=67307"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/67307\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=67307"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=67307"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=67307"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}