Environmental Ethics
and Public Policy
Ernest Partridge, Ph.D
www.igc.org/gadfly


HOME PAGE                             
                                                   
Editorials 
    Philosophy and Religion
    Ethics, Moral Issues, the Law
    The Environment
    Economics
    Education
    Science

On Politics
    The Crisis
    Foreign Relations, War, Peace
    The Media
    The Elections
    Civil Liberties and Dissent
    Republicans & the Right
    Democrats & the Left
    Lies, Propaganda & Corruption
    Culture War & Religious Right
    Coup d'Etat, 2000

Published Papers

Unpublished Papers

Reviews, Lectures, etc.    

Internet Publications

Jottings

Lecture Topics

Conscience of a Progressive
    (A Book in Progress)

A Dim View of Libertarianism

Rawls and the Duty to Posterity
    (Doctoral Dissertation)

The Ecology Project

For Environmental Educators

The Russian Environment

NO MO PO MO
    (Critiques of Post Modernism)

Notes from the Brink
    (Peace Studies)

The Gadfly's Bio Sketch

The Gadfly's Publications

The Online Gadfly: Editorial Policy
 


The Gadfly's E-Mail: gadfly@igc.org


Classical Guitar:
"The Other Profession
"

 

 

 

CRITERIA AND PRIVACY

Ernest Partridge

 

Philosophy of Mind
Prof. Richard G. Henson
University of Utah
Autumn, 1967

 

This paper was written for an audience of one: the course instructor, Prof. Henson. Professor Henson’s marginal comments (indicated by "RGH") and my responses ("EP") will be added to the end notes. The paper earned a "91" from Professor Henson, which I take to mean an A-.
 

"Let us introduce two antithetical terms in order to avoid elementary confusions: To the question 'How do you know that so-and-so is the case?' We sometimes answer by giving 'criteria' and sometimes by giving "symptoms.' If medical science call angina an inflammation caused by a particular bacillus, and we ask in a particular case 'why do you say this man has got angina?' then the answer "I have found the bacillus so-and-so in his blood' gives us the criterion, or what we may call the defining criterion of angina. If on the other hand the answer was, 'His throat is inflamed,' this might give us a symptom of angina. I call 'symptom' a phenomenon of which experience has taught us that it coincided, in some way or other, with the phenomenon which is our defining criterion. Then to say "A man has angina if this bacillus is found in him' is a tautology or it is a loose way of stating the definition of 'angina.' But to say, 'a man has angina whenever he has an inflamed throat' is to make a hypothesis.

"In practice, if you were asked which phenomenon is the defining criterion and which is the symptom, you would in most cases be unable to answer this question except by making an arbitrary decision ad hoc. It may be practical to define a word by taking one phenomenon as the defining criterion, but we shall easily be persuaded to define the word by means of what, according to our first use, was a symptom."

Ludwig Wittgenstein1

 

On the surface, the concept of "criterion" seems ordinary and commonplace. In Wittgenstein's hands, it has been greatly refined and elaborated, to the point at which it promises to unravel some long-standing philosophical tangles. But, like many a philosopher with a new, significant and powerful conceptual tool, Wittgenstein (and especially his Boswell, Norman Malcolm) has been tempted to over-reach. It appears that a great deal of contemporary philosophical analysis has been devoted to a careful examination of the scope of application of his kit of philosophical tools. In this paper, I shall add to this list. Specifically, I will contend that Wittgenstein and Malcolm have over-reached in attempting to comprehend the meaning of "private" psychological states in terms of public criteria. I will further contend that their attack on "private languages" does not succeed and thus does not compel us to accept their criteriological theory of the belief in other minds.
 

I

What are the important features of Wittgenstein's conception of a criterion?

Two thoughtful examinations of Wittgenstein's concept of "criterion" have been offered by Albritten2 and Wellman3. Both allow that the quotation that heads this paper is the closest that Wittgenstein came to giving us an explicit definition of "criterion." Wellman then suggests a "definition which seems to be implicit in his use of the term throughout his writings." The definition: "A criterion is a purely linguistic ground for judging that it is or is not correct to apply a given expression to some object." (Wellman, 1961, 162) He elaborates:

A criterion may be said to be a criterion for a linguistic expression fitting its object. By an object, I do not necessarily mean a physical object, but whatever the expression refers to, is applied to, or is about. By fitting, I mean is true of or applied to, but in a very special way. An expression fits an object when it is linguistically, rather than factually, correct to apply it to that object." (156)

And how do we distinguish "criteria" from "symptoms?"

Criteria are observable features which are directly connected to an expression by its meaning; symptoms are features which are indirectly connected to the expression by being associated with the criteria in our experience, To justify one's use of a description by giving criteria is to appeal to a convention; to justify one's use of a description by giving symptoms is to appeal to an empirical generalization. (159)

The concepts of "criterion" and "symptom" suggest the elementary distinction between "defining" and "accidental" characteristics -- a distinction that is rarely bypassed in an introductory course in Philosophy. These might terms might offer us an avenue into our points of contention with Wittgenstein and Malcolm.

Consider the following sentence: (a) "All crows are black," then allow me to present to you a bird that cries "caw caw", has the anatomical parts and shape of that which we call a "crow," etc. -- but it is orange. How does this presentation effect statement (a)? There are two possible responses: (1) A. is false, for here is a non-black crow; or (2) This thing is not a crow, for after all it is not black, and "all crows are black."

In the former case we can imagine a specimen that lacks the characteristic (even if, in fact, we fail to encounter it), and yet we are willing to apply the term in question, even so. The characteristic does not define the concept -- it is, what Wittgenstein could call a 'symptom." In the second case, by "crow" we mean "a thing that has characteristics A, b, c, n, and is black." Lacking any of these, it is not a crow. Thus we could identify blackness as a "defining criterion" of the concept "crow."4 All this is quite clear enough, simple and elementary: in Philo. 1 jargon, once more, statement (a) interpreted as case (1) is "synthetic", and as case (2), is "analytic."

Well, it is one thing to conjure up a textbook case. How does this distinction apply in use -- in the language-games we play in ordinary life? (And this, after all, is the arena in which Wittgenstein urges us to pursue our Philosophical Investigations). In some cases, the distinction is easy enough to recognize, but it is most clearly found in those language games that involve deliberate attempts at clarity, e.g. the sciences and the law. In such "games" explicit stipulations are to be found with precise listings of defining criteria. E.g. If a plane figure is bounded by three straight lines, then its a triangle because, in our geometry, that's what we mean by a "triangle."

However, once we leave the realm of exact stipulation and consider ordinary language, we face considerable difficulties. Consider, for example, the simple lemon.5 What characteristics must be present for us to consider this object a lemon? We can collect a list, easy enough, but we will soon find that none of these alleged "criteria" are indispensible. You could collect a basket of "lemons" and, perhaps, find yourself hard-put to identify one characteristic common to all the lemons. (It will be a strange collection, with some odd looking 'lemons" (?) -- but such a situation is conceivable, even if the specimens are not to be found now in California, Florida, or anywhere else). The common term "lemon" will refer, not to a set of individuals with a common "essence," but to a collection of individuals displaying a "family resemblance" (one of Wittgenstein's most suggestive and useful concepts) A lemon is a lemon, not if 'it has, specifically, traits a & b & c . . . & n, but if it has a "quorum"6 of such traits. None in particular, but enough! How many are enough? Well, if they are "strong criteria , then maybe a few will suffice. If they are "weak criteria", then it will take a bunch of them.

"Wait a minute," one might protest, "let's pin this down" How many of which criteria, in what combination." Alas, we cannot "pin this down." That's just the way the ordinary-language-game is played: inexact, sloppy and changing its rules in mid-play! The best that we might do is collect a few "normal" (?!) language-users and take a poll. Come to think of it, this sort of thing is commonly done -- the result is called a "dictionary." But when such a survey is conducted, we just don't expect too much precision when we get down to the fine points.

I hope that the reader will forgive this survey of rather commonplace "practical logic." It has, however, led us to some substantial problems. Prominent among them is the following: What now of that clear distinction, with which we began, between ''symptoms" and "criteria"? Wittgenstein himself admits that, on close examination, the line is fuzzy. "In practice, if you were asked which phenomenon is the defining criterion and which is the symptom, you would, in most cases, be unable to answer this question," for "in general we don't use language according to strict rules." (Blue and Brown Books 25)

Now this doesn't destroy the usefulness of the concepts of "criterion" and "symptom", nor does it deny that there is a difference. But it does indicate that the boundary between can be wide and indistinct – just as we know the difference between blue and green without being able to denote a clear line of demarcation. (Just which color is aqua?) The significance of this point can scarcely be understated. Let's pursue it.

We have, on one hand, the insistence that "the satisfaction of the criteria of y establishes the existence of y beyond question; it repeats the kind of case in which we were taught to say Y". (Malcolm, 1954, 87) "The satisfaction of the criterion of a thing's being the case entails that it is the case, which no symptom. . . can do." And yet, "it doesn’t follow that no criterion can seem to be satisfied when it isn't, or that no symptom can be perfectly reliable." (Albritton, 849).

But how do we distinguish between a correct "seeming to be satisfied" from an incorrect "seeming..."? How do we resolve Wittgenstein's admitted inability to distinguish between phenomena that are "defining criteria" and those that are "symptoms" in a language without "exact rules" (which means any "natural language"*)? We find ourselves in search of an exact, unequivocal criterion of "criteria." In a natural language, we shall search for it in vain.7 And if our search fails, (as it must) then our hope for a "criterion" that will "entail" (Albritton), or that will "establish beyond question" (Malcolm) is futile.8

The point might be illustrated by the following: The Pope is said to be infallible when he speaks ex cathedra on matters of faith and morals. The trouble is that there is no infallible test (for the Pope or his flock) to determine whether or not any given pronouncement is ex cathedra. This is equivalent to saying that the Pope is not infallible.9 So too, with no "meta-criteria," there is no clear identification of a criterion.10 With no such identification, there is no entailment. A "criterion," then, appears to be a strong indicator, and a "symptom" a weak indicator.11

With a backward look at the Tractatus, Wittgenstein observed that "the more narrowly we examine actual language, the sharper becomes the conflict between it and the requirement. (For the crystalline purity of logic was, of course, not a result of investigation: it was a requirement)." [Investigations, 107] Following another metaphor of Wittgenstein, Malcolm remarks that "what we need to do is to remove from our noses the logical glasses through which we look at reality. We must study the phenomenon of language as it is, without preconceived ideas." [1954, 88} Good advice, both! We must not let the logical pictures "hold us captive." [Wittgenstein, Investigations §115]
 

II

What does all this have to do with our recognition and identification of subjective states?

Really, not too much!

"Well, then, why bring it up in the first place?"

We bring it up simply because Wittgenstein and Malcolm believe that the concept of "criterion" has a great deal to do with our understanding of psychological states. We aim to show that the concept of criterion is inappropriately applied to the philosophical problems of "privacy" and "other minds." Let us then return to our lemons.

If we have not only a "full quorum" but a "packed house" of criteria (of a lemon), then, by George!, we have a lemon! It is that which has these criteria. With psychological states, we have a fundamentally different situation – moreover, a fatally different situation for the Wittgenstein-Malcolm criteriological theory. For with private states, no amount of objective, behavioral or expressive (take your pick) "criteria" will add up to a pain, or a pleasure, or whatever. If the users of a language-game are in agreement about what constitutes a quorum of defining criteria of a public thing or event, then the presence of this quorum will mean that this is a such-and-such. To quote Gov. Reagan: "If it quacks like a duck, swims like a duck, and looks like a duck, then it’s a duck." Nothing else will dissuade them for it will not overwhelm the way they choose to use the word (or, if you prefer, "play the language game"). Bu no amount of behavioral display or linguistic expression will add up to the same thing as a person’s feelings. There can be no "entailment" here. A strong indication? Yes. Beyond practical doubt? Most likely.

But this quite misses the point. These locutions are in the language of evidence.-- of symptomatology. But "criteria," we are urged, have to do with identifications. The presence of "enough" of the criteria must, of themselves, finally settle the question of what this thing is. There can be no other, unaccounted for sine qua non. But not only is a subjective state a "something-more-than" behavior, speech and objective circumstance – it is a fundamentally-something-more. It is a something-more that no amount of "outside" manifestations can entail.12 Yet without the subjective component, all these "outside" criteria are simply criteria of nothing -- a shell without an egg. These alleged "criteria" can only indicate, albeit they can indicate up to the point of "practical certainty." But all this can be said of "symptoms." And we are left with the question: How do we come to believe that these behavioral indicators are symptoms of "other minds", or for that matter, of the "same" state of our own minds?

It would, seem that if we wish to hold on to a "criteriological" theory that will yield us knowledge "beyond question" of subjective states, then we will have to suppose that these alleged subjective states are these behavior traits, linguistic responses and environmental circumstances. We will have to deny that there can be a super-stoic who endures a pain without displaying symptoms. We must discount the neglected child or the habitual liar who can feign enough pain criteria and yet have no pain. We must, in short, be old-fashioned Watsonian behaviorists and deny consciousness and sensations. And this is what neither Malcolm or Wittgenstein wish to do. Both allow that there is a subjective "something else.13

"Well then, if the pain criteria can never be the pain, then the criteria must not be all that we mean by "his pain." That is, they are not "criteria" at all, but variably adequate "symptoms."14 This surely is an unstartling and commonplace conclusion to come to. And so we are left where we started – trying to account for our knowledge of another's pain -- trying, that is, to explain why we take the behavioral "super-symptoms" (read "alleged criteria") to be indicators of "his pain."

Malcolm tries to rescue the situation by suggesting that we don't need logical certainty after all. He quotes Wittgenstein's remark that we "can be as certain of someone else's sensation as of any fact.:"15 [Investigations, 224] "Just try – in a real case – to doubt someone else's fear or pain." [Investigations §303] "Perhaps," says Malcolm, "we can imagine a doubt; but we do not take it seriously . . There is a concept of certainty in these language-games only because we stop short of what is conceivable." [Malcolm, 1954, 89] This means, I presume, "short of logical entailment." Still further:

The man who doubts the other's pain may be neurotic, may 'lack a sense of reality,' but his reasoning is perfectly sound. If his doubts are true then the injured man is not in pain. His reaction is abnormal but not illogical. The certainty that the injured man is in pain (the normal reaction) ignores the endless doubts that could be proposed and investigated. [Malcolm, 1954, 90]

Let's drop a flag on this play! Is Malcolm employing a double standard here? Does he demand of his rivals a logical purity that he does not require of himself or of Wittgenstein? (A common enough failing amongst philosophers). Let's try it out. Where, above, he quotes Wittgenstein as saying "Just try – in a real case – to doubt someone else's fear or pain," let us substitute ". . . to doubt that that human figure has a mind." Now let's follow through with Wittgenstein’s challenge.16 Cannot the analogy argument for other minds, or even still other theories, be justified in just such a manner? Could not these rivals get by with just such a less-than-total standard of certainty? But to apply the test of logical doubt is not to pretend that we seriously entertain such a doubt, but only that we can conceivably do so. Who in fact is a solipsist? Yet Malcolm uses a reduction to solipsism to refute the analogical argument. [Malcolm, 1958,156-7] Would not the same standard of total logical rigor refute Malcolm's own criteriological theory?17

But doesn't the "expression theory" cover up these difficulties? After all, if I am in pain, then my report "it hurts" can not possibly be incorrect. I can't even be said to "know" I am in pain, for it is inconceivable for me to be in pain and not to be aware of it. And so, with no counter-concept, there is no concept. The pain and its expression are therefore incorrigible, and "that the natural pain-behavior and the utterance 'it hurts' are each incorrigible is what makes it possible for each of them to be a criterion of pain." [Malcolm1954, 86]

Let us grant the entire list of premises above (although, in fact, I do not believe we must). The criteriological theory remains unfounded. The utterance "it hurts" may be incorrigible. But only to me -- the "first person." But I am in no need of behavioral criteria to tell me that I have a pain (as Ziff well argues). The situation is wholly different to the second person. For reasons already argued, the expression "it hurts" is not incorrigible to the audience. The hurting hurts only the first person. It is not thus immediately available to the second. The first person gets the egg, the second merely the shell. The expression of the first person is a contingent symptom, quite conceivably faulty, as may be the audience's perception or judgment of it. It is, accordingly, no criterion at all!

In summary, then, it would seem that the Wittgenstein-Malcolm concept of "criterion' proposes a strange hybrid indeed! Criteria can "logically establish", but do not "entail" (at least in the case of subjective states). Expressions of sensation are "incorrigible" but in a contingent sort of way. We can know that x is in pain 'beyond question" provided that a certain unspecifiable number of conditions are not in force. It would be most helpful to have an explanatory method that has the advantages of logical force without its shortcomings – but to accomplish this, one had better come up with a new logic, and explain it in detail. I cannot see that Wittgenstein or Malcolm offer us any such thing. Moreover, I seriously doubt that such a logic, devised to do the work they intend, is at all possible – or if possible, of any use.

 

III

But if we invalidate 'criteria', what is left to account for other minds?

Well, perhaps we will just have to defend "private language" from the assaults of Wittgenstein and Malcolm. If we succeed, we then might be able to make sense of (a) "I have a pain;" (b) "Its the same sort of pain that I had last week;" (c) "You seem to have the same sort of pain."

Perhaps the most telling defense of "private languages" can be derived by challenging the critics, Wittgenstein and Malcolm, to account for some perfectly commonplace events. If they are correct, and we cannot in fact make sense of "private rules", then how can we account for the following poignant little scene;

Mother; "Johnny, its time for you to go to the Dentist."

Johnny; "I don' wanna. Last time he took that big drill, and he hurt me, somethin' awful!"

Now it isn't the drill and probes that causes Johnny to protest. It is what these instruments did to the "private Johnny." It is not his holding of his cheek or his yelling, but that which caused these expressions which provoke his present anguish. He might conceivably have completely forgotten all about the drills and probes and yelling, etc. But what he does remember, and quite well indeed, is that "it hurt." If a philosophical Johnny is asked to explain what he means by "it hurt" per se – not what caused it, or what expressed it – he may find himself at "the point where one would like just to emit an inarticulate sound." [Wittgenstein, Investigations §261]He may be at a "basic fact." But to say that he doesn't understand it, or that he cannot remember or imagine it, or even that it has no meaning to him – all this is clearly false. He very well understands what "it hurt" means, and He'll try almost anything to avoid going through the "same experience" again.

Such cases could easily be multiplied. It seems quite clear that we do in fact recognize and compare our "criteria-less" sense recollections, and do attribute some psychological states to others. Wittgenstein and Malcolm admit as much too. But, in abolishing "private languages" they undercut the grounds for this behavior. To them, it makes no sense to say that we do these things for, recall, it is not the alleged criteria that we are remembering and comparing – it is those private somethings that the "outside" indicators; indicate.18

We could continue this frontal attack upon the critics of private languages. I suggest a different approach. I prefer to shrug it off with a casual 'so what?" The accomplishment of Wittgenstein and Malcolm [RGH which] is, from a logical point of view, subtle, clever, and in a way, rather elegant. But really, what does it all matter?

What if we have no "criteria" for determining that "this pain" is the same as "last week's pain." What difference does this make? Suppose that we did? Suppose that there were some "marks", say a flash of colored lights, to accompany our pains. 'Jut how would we know that the "same" color accompanied the "same" pain. Even if we did, how would we determine that the same color-pain appears now as appeared before? Well, with imagined colors, we can go "outside" and (say) check with a color chart. So we might note that this is the same "color of pain" as that of last week, which I also checked with the chart. But what criteria are to tell us that our faculty for matching pain-colors is the same now as it was then? To put it generally, if we seek to compare two things, we then must find criteria of comparison. If we determine that the "mark " of identity on item A is the same as the "mark" of identity on item B, then A and B are the "same" in that respect. But how are we to determine that the marks that identified the 'sameness" were in fact the same in each case? Well, lets look for some super-marks that will apply to both marks in the "same way."  Of course, we have an infinite regress. We simply have to begin somewhere. There must be a criterionless criterion.

In a sense, we do in fact have a "mark", albeit faulty, to indicate, e.g., that today's pain is "the same as" that of last week. It is the "it-seems-to-be-the-same" feeling. And this just might be an ultimate. But any decision of "sameness", subjective or objective (e.g. comparing instrument dials), must eventually, through a hierarchy of "marks", be brought to this ultimate mark of "it-seems-to-be-the-same."19

Now this is not to suggest that the "it-seems-to-be-the-same" criterion is the court of last resort Were this the case, we never would have discovered that the deja vu experience is illusory -- the feeling that "I've been here before," or "I've met you before somewhere" when a quick autobiographical canvas reminds us that we most certainly have not. But this only shows that we often have a variety of means by which to verify, or correct, our recollections. This is true in that most cited of cases, the sensation of pains. With pains we do often have the additional support of "first person analogies" Consider for example: "This thumb pain seems like the same pain as the one I had last week. Come to think of it, it should, since I hit it with a hammer then, just as I did right now!" Of course we can ask, "how are you sure that you hit your thumb then in just the same way as you did right now?" Well, we can call upon further evidence. Perhaps someone else (!) was present at both mishaps. But how does he know it was the same sort of accident? Or we could say that the hammer must have hit me the same way because it hurts me the way it did before. "But that's circular You can't tie two horses to each other and expect to hold them -- you've got to find a post." Well, maybe. But if you tie enough horses together, they'll be a rather stable herd.

This suggests another answer to the attack upon "private languages." Philosophical analysts have the understandible habit of contemplating bits, pierces and parts -- in and of themselves, and as they interact. Is it then not possible that Wittgenstein and Malcolm have overlooked the fact that psychological states come in "clusters"? This fact, and some tried and true principles of associational psychology, might well lead us out of the Wittgensteinian thicket.

Consider the argument that Malcolm gives against recognizing "the same" sensation:

One will be inclined to say here that one can simply remember this sensation and by remembering it will know that one is making a consistent application of its name. But will it also be possible to have a false memory impression? On the private-language hypothesis, what would show that your memory impression is false -- or true? (1954, 77)

In response, let's return to Johnny:

Mother: "Johnny, you are going to see the dentist today."

Johnny: "Oh boy, lucky me!"

Johnny is soon to find our that his memory impression of his last visit is false. But let's leave this unfortunate child and turn to our own situation. I propose the following experiment: think of the pain of a pin prick. Got it? OK! Now take this pin and push it against your finger. Do your sensation and your memory match up? If so, they are the same sort of sensation! But, you reply (bleeding finger in mouth), "how do I know.that they are the same -- what validates this impression of sameness?" Maybe the impression of the sameness of sensation is all that you have. But this is no less than a scientist in his laboratory has when he matches readings of his dials, or a musician, when he tunes to A, or two witnesses, when they report "the same" event. Surely this should meet 1alcolm's less-than-complete test of certainty!

Now of course we don't go about testing our sense recollections in such a way, each time we have them. But when we test them, they seem to work out. Moreover, as noted, our "seemings of sameness" seem to be accompanied by clusters of other familiar experiences -- that is, we are constantly involved in tacit "testings," of which we take no especial notice, except when something doesn't pan out (as with the deja vu experience).

Now the criteriologist will reply, "that's just what I have been saying all along! The pin against the skin is a criterion of the pain!" I hope that I have, by now, shown that it is no more than a test -- a "symptom" (here the word "symptom' seems queer indeed). I can have the pain without the pin, or I can be pricked without feeling the pain (with a post-hypnotic suggestion or an anesthesia). It could feel different. In fact, if it did -- if, say, it caused a dull ache or a tickle -- I would recognize that this sensation just isn't the same thing, which indicates that something else is operative here! The pin offers just a partial test. But enough of such tests will suffice. Our experience comes in clusters. When these clusters verify and strengthen our impressions of "sameness", life goes on as usual. When something is out of order -- not the same -- the strangeness of it jolts us and brings it to our attention. The fact that this happens as rarely as it does, gives strong validation to our assumption that the same sort of stimulus results in the same sort of sensation response.

.What then of these other biped figures about us? How can we tell that their "minds" have the same sort of experiences as our do? Well, unlike Wittgenstein's beetles, these things act back. A doctor examining a patient will be told the time of occurrence of a pain, its location, intensity, "sharpness," etc. This we can imagine in ourselves. Indeed, we have a common descriptive language of pains.

In his attempt to reduce the analogy argument to solipsism, Malcolm argues that "pain' cannot mean the same for the first and second person. "When I say 'I am in pain,' by 'pain' I mean a certain inward state. When I say 'He is in pain,' by 'pain' I mean behavior." [1958, 157] If experience is cut into analytical bits, then we may well find ourselves in such a trap. But if we hold to the clusters which our experience presents to us, then Malcolm's observation would read "When I say 'I am in pain,' by 'pain' I mean a certain inward state which prompts my behavior. When I say 'He is in pain,' by 'pain' I mean that which prompts his behavior.'20 The step to the analogy argument for other minds is then quite simple. "If the behaviors are alike [and "alike" would be Malcolm's prime target here], then since I know the feelings that accompany my behavior, such things may be presumed to accompany his behavior." Or, to put it in tabular form, it is quite true that I feel my pain and not yours, and so:

                        ME                            YOU

                  Sensationme   not=         Sensationyou     

        BUT    Howl                =         Howl
                    From Cut         =         From Cut
                    Bleeding           =         Bleeding
                    Wish to avoid   =         Wish to avoid
                    Etc.                  =         Etc.

As we add to this list, and repeat this and similar experiences, the analogy will grow stronger, which in fact it does. This is called "maturation." But isn't this just the old analogy argument? Perhaps it is this -- and more. Perhaps we are dealing here with analogies that are not merely 'arguments," but are fundamental conditions of human thought and growth!

It is not my purpose here to defend the analogy argument. However, I hope to demonstrate that analogy, or perhaps some other hypotheses, are opened to us once we are willing to accept that our "private rules' -- our recollections and identifications of private states -- come out of a complex experience-in-process. If we analytically dissect experience, we may find ourselves lost in confusion and paradox. Wittgenstein and Malcolm have taken the clock apart and have failed to find the "tick." This is understandable. I trust that we will be forgiven if we continue to believe that it makes sense to speak of and to recognize the ticking of our working clocks.
 

IV

What, after all, does Wittgenstein have to tell us anyway.

A great deal!

Lest I conclude with an overly harsh note of criticism, I would like to add my voice to those who have acknowledged Wittgenstein to be one of the most significant of twentieth century philosophers. I opened this paper with the hypothesis that Wittgenstein and Malcolm had "over-reached" in applying their concept of "criterion" to private states. This is, I believe, a vulnerable target among a fund of ideas that includes some insights of lasting significance. Indeed, I get the impression that much of the vulnerability of the criteriological theory comes from a corruption, by Malcolm, of the sound doctrine of Wittgenstein. In his zeal, Malcolm may have rushed in where Wittgenstein trod with great care. So it is that, concerning psychological states, Wittgenstein seems the more interested in expression theory, and Malcolm the more interested in criteriological theory.21

I had little to say about the expression theory of sensation statements, precisely because I find it persuasive and productive. After all, criticism is a much more stimulating philosophical game than agreement, The expression theory is strongest, I believe, as an account of the genesis of subjective language in the individual (to which Wittgenstein gives due attention. [Investigations, §244]). The theory becomes less persuasive as an account of the sensation language-games of the adult. A metaphor from the Tractatus [6.54] is suggestive here. Is it not possible that the "expressive" use of sense-language serves as a ladder, upon which the child ascends until he reaches the point at which he can conceptualize and abstract -- that is, treat his states of feeling as objects of thought. Once he reaches this point, he can discard the ladder. (I don't wish to pretend that such words as "ouch" are absent from adult vocabularies). Once feeling-concepts are acquired, then it is not difficult to account for a belief in other minds -- say, by analogy -- provided that we are willing to settle for an inductively strong but deductively leaky inference.22

Of the lasting value of Wittgenstein's general account of "criteria,' volumes have been, and will continue to be written. He has left to the philosophical community a vast supply of rich, if often unrefined, ore. Contemporary philosophy is asking his questions and laboring in his vineyards. This is the truest tribute that ca n be given a critical philosopher. I will not attempt to list his lasting contributions, but will close with but one example that grows directly from his examination of 'criteria." I can scarcely improve upon Wellman's account:

Since the time of Socrates it has usually been assumed that all the instances of a descriptive predicate have some one thing in common. This assumption has been accepted both by those ontologically oriented philosophers who conceive of philosophy as discovering the real natures of the basic kinds of entities, and by those analytic philosophers who aim only at stating precisely the necessary and sufficient conditions for the application of some linguistic expression. To have challenged this assumption and to have partially explored an alternative to it is surely a major contribution to the progress of philosophy. [1962,163]

To which I can only add, amen!


NOTES AND REFERENCES


1.    The Blue and Brown Books, Harper Torchbooks, pp.24-5.

2.    Albritton, Rogers, "On Wittgenstein's Use of the Term ‘Criterion’," Journal of Philosophy, 1959. p, 845.

3.    Wellman, Carl, 'Wittgenstein's Conception of a Criterion," Philosophical Review, 1962.

4.    Do criteria refer to expressions, their uses, characteristics, or what? Apparently any or all of these -- and more. Wittgenstein gives us no clear guidance on this. (Cf. Wellman 1961. 155).

5.    As does Scriven ("The Logic of Criteria") and Wellman (1961

6.    This marvelous metaphor is from John Hospers’ Introduction to Philosophical Analysis

7.    A point that I am prepared to defend at length -- but cannot do so in this space. Cf. my paper "Whatever Became of Logical Positivism; or The Vienna Circle Squared." (Alas, unpublished -- the last I heard).

8.     RGH: "Doesn’t follow that there are no clear cases of criteria."
        EP: Agreed! As Witttgenstein says, we can show things that we can’t define."

9.    This may not be an accurate account of the Roman Catholic doctrine. However, true or false, it serves to illustrate my point

10.    Again, let me acknowledge that "exact" language-games such as science can almost provide meta-criteria by stipulation. But even so, the terms of the stipulation must eventually be derived from the natural language. (The "open texture of language.") Formal languages such as logic and mathematics constitute an additional case, but do not bear directly upon our discussion.

11.    Grice and Strawson's article "In Defense of a Dogma" (Philosophical Review, April, 1956) is roughly a defense of the sort of dogma I am attacking here -- a sharp analytic-synthetic distinction. However, my position is much milder than that of W v0. Quine, whose paper "Two Dogmas of Empiricism" provoked the Grice and Strawson rejoinder. Moreover, even if the gist of the G & S paper be allowed, this would not, I believe, rehabilitate the criteriological theory. But to argue this would require still another paper, and I have papers enough, thanks!

12.    "Do the propositions that describe the criterion of his being in pain logically imply the proposition 'He is in pain'?" W ittgenstein's answer is clearly in the negative. Pain-behavior is a criterion of pain only in certain circumstances." [E.g. He is not rehearsing a play, or is not hypnotieed. And, says Malcolm, there is an "indefinite" list of such circumstances]. "Therefore, entailment conditions cannot be formulated; there are none."

13.    Says Malcolm, "Wittgenstein does not deny that there are inner experiences any more than he denies that there are mental occurrences." [1954, 94. See context of this quotation for citations from Nittgeristein that appear to support this observation of Malcolm.

14.    RGH: Not strictly right: A could be a logically necessary or sufficient condition of B without being either identical w B or a symptom of B. I.e., these two sentences seem to mean that "identical with" and "symptom of" are the only relationships we could have.

        EP: Very well – then the question remains: how do we establish necessary or sufficient (or whatever) relationships between pain and pain-criteria if we do not, in fact, have an independent notion of what a pain is – and therefore what "pain" means?

15.    Once more, an admission that this is a factual, rather than a formal question. [RGH: What is "this"? The question whether someone is in pain?]

16.    Better yet, try this out in the original [Malcolm 1954, 89] (I am "plugging in" the analogy argument above).

17.    RGH: Good! Though it would be well to spell out exactly where too much rigor is required – in the theory or in the inference to someone’s pain.

18.    RGH: Don’t see this. "Hurt," "pain," et al, are bits of the common language, which Johnny has learned to use like the rest of us. The are not parts of a private language.

         EP: Sure – but why are we able to compare pains recollected – "like this," but not "like that" – unless there is a private somethings before us to be attached to the "common language"?

19.    RGH: Plausible, at least.

20.    If we prefer to dismiss the causal language as unwarranted, then we might use Hume's ploy and substitute "which is accompanied by' for "which prompts."

21.    This I will have to check out as I read ahead in The Blue and Brown Books, and the Philosophical Investigations.

22.    This is but a suggestion that is in great need of study and expansion. So we'll just put a number on this paragraph and call it an "Investigation."

 


 

BIBLIOGRAPHY


Albritton, Rogers, "On Wittgenstein's Use of the term 'Criterion,'" Journal of Philosophy, LVI (1959) 845.

Ayer, A. J. "Can There be a Private Language?" Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume, (1954), 63-78. Reprinted in Morick (See Below).

Ayer, A. J. The Problem of Knowledge, Pelican Books, 1956. See especially Chapter 5, "Myself and Others."

Casteneda, Hector-Neri, "Criteria, Analogy, and Knowledge of Other Minds," Journal of Philosophy, LIX (1962) 533

Chappell, Vere, 'Introduction" to The Philosophy of Mind, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1962. (ed. Chappell ),

Chisolm, R. M. Theory of Knowledge, Prentice Hall, 1966.

Grice, H. P. And Strawson, P. F., "In Defense of a Dogma," Philosophical Review, LXV (1956), pp. 141-158.

Hartnack, J., Wittgenstein and Modern Philosophy, transl. A. Cranston., Garden City, N.Y.: Anchor Books, 1965.

Hospers, John, An Introduction to Philosophical Analysis, Prentice Hall, 1967.

Kenny, Anthony, "Criteria," Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Macmillan Co. The Free Press, 1967. Vol. 2, p 257.

Malcolm, Norman, "Knowledge of Other Minds," Journal of Philosophy,

LV (1958), 141. Reprinted, Chappell (above p.

Malcolm, Norman, ''Ludwig Wittgenstein," The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The MacMillan Co. and The Free Press, 1967. Vol. 8, p. 327.

Malcolm, Norman, "Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations," Philosophical Review, LXIII (1954), p. 540. Reprinted in Chappell (above), p.74.

Morick, Harold, "Introduction" to Wittgenstein and the Problem of Other Minds, (H. Morick, ed.), McGraw Hill, 1967

Quine, W. vO, "Two Dogmas of Empiricism," From a Logical Point of View, 1961..

Scriven, Michael, "The Logic of Criteria," The Journal of Philosophy, LVI, (1959), p. 857.

Shorter, J. A., "Other Minds," The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The MacMillan Co. and The Free Press, 1967, Vol 6. p. 6.

Wellman, Carl, "Our Criteria for Third Person Psychological Sentences," The Journal of Philosophy, LVIII (1961) p. 281.

Wellman, Carl, "Wittgenstein's Conceotion of a Criterion," The Philosophical Review, LXXI, (1962), p. 433. Reprinted in Morick (abovei-T7754

Wittgenstein, Ludwig, The Blue and Brown Books, Harper Tochbooks, 1965

Wittgenstein, Ludwig, Philosophical Investigations, The MacMillan Co 1953


Dr. Ernest Partridge is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental Ethics and Public Policy. He has taught Philosophy at the University of California, and in Utah, Colorado and Wisconsin. He publishes the website, "The Online Gadfly" (www.igc.org/gadfly) and co-edits the progressive website, "The Crisis Papers" (www.crisispapers.org).  Dr. Partridge can be contacted at: gadfly@igc.org .