- Anti-realism
In
philosophy , the term anti-realism is used to describe anyposition involving either the denial of an objectivereality ofentities of a certain type or the denial that verification-transcendent statements about a type of entity are either true or false. This latter construal is sometimes expressed by saying "there is no fact of the matter as to whether or not P." Thus, we may speak of anti-realism with respect to other minds, thepast , thefuture , universals, mathematical entities (such asnatural numbers ), moral categories, thematerial world , or eventhought . The two construals are clearly distinct and often confused. For example, an "anti-realist" who denies that other minds exist (i. e., a solipsist) is quite different from an "anti-realist" who claims that there is no fact of the matter as to whether or not there are unobservable other minds (i. e., a logicalbehaviorist ).Fact|date=January 2008Anti-realism in Philosophy
Michael Dummett
The term was popularised by
Michael Dummett , who introduced it inhis paper "Realism" to re-examine several classical philosophicaldisputes involving such doctrines asnominalism ,conceptual realism ,idealism andphenomenalism . The novelty ofDummett's approach consisted in seeing these disputes as analogous tothe dispute between intuitionism andPlatonism in thephilosophy of mathematics .According to intuitionists (anti-realists with respect to mathematical objects), the
truth of a mathematical statement consists in our ability to prove it. According to platonists (realists), the truth of a statement consists in its correspondence to objective reality. Thus, intuitionists are ready to accept a statement of the form "P or Q" as true only if we can prove P or if we can prove Q:this is called thedisjunction property . In particular, we cannot in general claim that "P or not P" is true (thelaw of the excluded middle ), since in some cases we may not be able either to prove nor disprove the statement P. Similarly, intuitionists object to the failure of theexistence property for classical logic, where one can prove , without being able to produce any term of which holds.Dummett argues that the intuitionistic notion of truth lies at thebottom of various classical forms of anti-realism. He uses thisnotion to re-interpret
phenomenalism , claiming that it need nottake the form of areductionism (often considered untenable).Precursors
Doubts about the possibility of definite truth have been expressed since ancient times, for instance in the skepticism of
Pyrrho . Anti-realism about matter or physical entities also has a long history. It can be found in theidealism of
Berkeley,Hegel , and so on.Anti-Realist arguments
Idealists are skeptics about the physical world, maintaining either: 1) that nothing exists outside the mind, or 2) that we would have no access to a mind-independent reality even if it may exist. Realists, in contrast, hold that perceptions or
sense data are caused by mind-independent objects. Butthis introduces the possibility of another kind of skepticism: since our understanding ofcausality is that the same effect can be produced by multiple causes, there is a lack of determinacy about what one is really perceiving. A concrete example of a situation where an individual's sensory input might be caused by something other than what he thinks is causing it is thebrain in a vat scenario.On a more abstract level, model theoretic arguments hold that a given set of
symbol s in atheory can be mapped onto any number of sets of real-world objects — each set being a "model" of the theory — providing the interrelationships between the objects are the same. (Compare withsymbol grounding ).Anti-realism in Science
In
philosophy of science , anti-realism applies chiefly to claims about the non-reality of "unobservable" entities such aselectron s orDNA , which are not detectable with human senses. For a brief discussion comparing such anti-realism to its opposite, realism, see (Okasha 2002, ch. 4). Ian Hacking (1999, p. 84) also uses the same definition. One prominent anti-realist position in the philosophy of science isinstrumentalism , which takes a purely agnostic view towards the existence of unobservable entities: unobservable entity X serves simply as an instrument to aid in the success of theory Y. We need not determine the existence or non-existence of X. Some scientific anti-realists argue further, however, and deny that unobservables exist even as non-truth conditioned instruments.Anti-realism in Art
In discussions of
art (including visual art, writing,music , andlyrics ), "anti-realism" and "anti-realist" may be used in one of the philosophical senses described above, or may simply be used in contrast to realism, in whatever sense the latter is meant. Thussurrealism in visual art is an "anti-realist" tendency, and thepsychedelic bands common in the United States in the 1960s were "anti-realist," etc. These terms may not be as precise when applied to art as when applied to philosophical matters. "Anti-reality" is occasionally used in this sense, although it may be used in other senses.ee also
*
Constructivist epistemology
*Deflationary theory of truth
*Fact
*Idealism
*Intuitionistic logic
*Irrealism (philosophy)
*Philosophical realism
*Quasi-realism
*Reality
*Neil Tennant (philosopher)
*Crispin Wright
* Theory of Everything (ToE)
*Münchhausen Trilemma
*Nihilism External links
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/realism-sem-challenge/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
References
* Michael Dummett (1963). "Realism," reprinted in: Truth and Other Enigmas, Harvard University Press: 1978, pp. 145-165.
* Michael Dummett (1967). "Platonism," reprinted in: Truth and Other Enigmas, Harvard University Press: 1978, pp. 202-214.
* Ian Hacking (1999). "The Social Construction of What?". Harvard University Press: 2001.
* Samir Okasha (2002). "Philosophy of Science: A Very Short Introduction". Oxford University Press.
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