Category: General

CCE (UoA) – Conspiracy Theories: Philosophy and Critical Thinking

A reminder…

Class Number: 77961

When: 6 sessions, Wednesday 23 July – 27 August, 10am – 12pm

Where: Room 218, Level 2, Building No. 810, 1 – 11 Short Street

Fee (GST incl): $117.00 (International Fee (GST incl): $195.80)

Class Limit: 18

Course Description: Some people think that Philosophy is all abstract thinking. However critical thinking is a set of philosophical tools that allow you to make informed and well-reasoned arguments towards particular viewpoints. In this course you will look at the application of philosophy to conspiracy theories, ranging from the authorship of Shakespeare’s plays, to the Da Vinci Code itself and to the North Head tunnels conspiracy. Through the application of critical thinking skills to the content of these theories you will experience first-hand the practical application of philosophy to everyday life.

(More information available here)

Craig vs. Cook

Well, I went to the debate between Doctors William Lane Craig and Bill Cooke and, I have to say, I was not impressed with either of them. Craig used fairly trite arguments for theism and Cooke utterly failed to engage with Craig on any substantive matters.

Craig’s four-and-an-half argument for theism was:

1. There must be a creator (in respect to the Big Bang).
2. The Universe is finely tuned for life (and it can’t be that way by chance).
3. There can be no objective morality without God.
4. The historicity of Christ suggests that his post-crucifixation appearances are a miracle.
4.5. He has had a personal experience of Jesus (I call this half an argument because, as Craig agreed, it doesn’t actually provide proof of anything much).

If we disregard 4.5 then we have four arguments supposedly in support of theism, all of which are substantially controversial, none of which Cooke was able to provide an argument against. This was a great pity; Cooke started well but, when it came to the rebuttal stage, failed to deliver. Cooke, it seems, was just not prepared for the debate; he hadn’t done his research into Craig’s academic history (despite Cooke’s assertion Craig is qualified to talk about cosmology) and, most importantly, had no comebacks to the four arguments listed above. This wasn’t just surprising; it was negligent. Those are four commonly given arguments for Christianity and each one of them is controversial, each one has been argued over in the public domain and each one of them should be easily addressed by someone who claims to be a Rationalist (and an atheist).

Aside from Cooke’s inability to debate Craig (and it wasn’t just his lack of preparation; Cooke also was condescending to the audience and gave up talking twice, thus not just giving Craig the moral high ground (because he wanted to debate the issues) but also confirming, in the eyes of the theists, that atheism can offer no real objections to theism.

Whilst Cooke was disappointing for his inability to engage in the debate Craig was disappointing because he wasn’t playing fair. He was presenting very simplified arguments with little justification and far too many leaps of logic (there must be an uncaused first cause; this must, therefore, be a god-entity). In part this is Cooke’s fault again; had he pressed Craig then we would have got the more sophisticated arguments (there must be an uncaused first cause; this must, therefore, be a god-entity because uncaused causes, to cause, must be more than just abstracta, et al) but, even so, Craig could have been a little more sophisticated. I went to his talk to the Department of Philosophy earlier in the day and, from what I saw, he is a good philosopher. It was also telling that whenever members (and former members) of the Department engaged Craig at the debate he automatically started talking about the more sophisticated versions of his material so he was dumbing it down for what he assumed was a fairly ignorant public.

It’s hard to express just how frustrating listening to the debate really was. What was fun was watching Professor John Bishop translate long and laborious questions into shorter versions, none of which misrepresented the questioner’s intention. He’s been teaching for so long that he’s heard them all.

Not my own work

There are problems with the natural selection-economic markets analogy, of course. To begin with, it is not clear what markets maximize, if anything. Natural selection maximizes local fitness (of a particular population in response to a specific set of environmental circumstances). Free markets may maximize trade volume, for instance; or perhaps they minimize prices; or they augment per capita income, but it is hard to see why exactly any of these things would be necessarily good, since according to several studies published over the last few years they are all only loosely correlated with quality of life, or with other important priorities, like justice, equality, or environmental preservation.

This is just a section from a posting on Rationally Speaking on Dr. Michael Shermer’s ‘The Mind of the Market.’ It’s worth a gander.

Another trivial update, brought to you by the vowels in the name of god…

Well, there’s not much to say this week. I’ve spent the last few days marking essays and today I’m going to embark on getting a paper ready for submission to an appropriate journal.

And then, thesis work.

On Sunday Jose is going to interview me over the upcoming adult education course I will be teaching (on Conspiracy Theories). Yes, it’s probably akin to advertising but, then again, I have no idea what Jose is going to ‘grill’ me on so it could end up being mighty informative and completely off-topic.

For those of you not in the know, there is going to be a rather interesting talk this coming Tuesday (the 17th) by Dr. William Lane (squaring off Dr. Bill Cooke) entitled ‘Is God a Delusion?’ Lane is a fierce critic of Dawkins and, by all accounts, not just a very good public speaker but also a very good philosopher. This is, for some, a bit startling, because Lane is also a fervent Christian.

It should prove to be a very interesting spectacle.

Moot: Is God a Delusion?

17 Jun 2008

Presenter John Bishop

Department Philosophy

Venue OGGB5

Time 7pm to 8pm

William Lane Craig, Research Professor of Philosophy at Talbot School of Theology in La Mirada, California. William holds a PhD from the University of Birmingham (England) and a D.Theol from the University of Munich (Germany). He has authored or edited over thirty books including Assessing the New Testament Evidence for the Historicity of the Resurrection of Jesus; Atheism, Atheism and Big Ban Cosmology; and God, Time and Eternity. He has also written more than a hundred articles in professional journals of philosophy and theology. William was President of the Evangelical Philosophical Society from 1996-2005, and is currently President of the Philosophy of Time Society.

Bill Cooke, Senior Lecturer, Manukau Institue of Technology. Bill has a PhD in Religious Studies from Victoria University of Wellington. He became an active atheist and humanist in 1984. Bill has served as president of the NZ Rationalist and Humanist Assoication, and editor of the Rationalist and Humanist journal, The Open Society. He has also worked as director of programs for the Center for Inquiry and is a fellow of the committee for the Scientific Examination of Religion. His books include Heathen in Godzone: Seventy Years of Rationalism in New Zealand (1998) and A Dirctionary of Atheism, Skepticism and Humanism (2006).

For those of you not conversant in Uni lingo, OGGB5 is the Owen G Glenn building, lecture theatre 5.

Petty Psychologies

Some vapid Conspiracy Theorists love to engage in guilt by association. The Socialist Unity Party, one of them might claim, was sympathetic to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Thus all socialists are communists, their peculiar brand of logic suddenly suggests. This strange inference, where the Conspiracy Theorist generalises from the (supposed) excesses of a sub-group to the claim that all members of the group intend to act, or are motivated similarly, is what I want to call an example of Petty Psychology.

Almost all of us engage in semi-rigorous form of reasoning about the motivations or intentions of others which is commonly called ‘Folk Psychology’ (those of us who do not are usually psychologists who, understandably, use refined psychological notions rather than folksy, crude approximations). This form of psychology is folksy; rather than being based upon academic, tested notions its relies on an appeal to things we all think are plausible, if not true. It is folksy in the same way that folk tales are folksy; there is either some kernel of truth to the folk tale or its supposed plausibility is explicable even if it gets the relationship between cause and effect the wrong way wrong, et cetera. Most of us will quite happily admit to using folk psychology; indeed, in Philosophy we use folk notions all the time in examples, with the admitted caveat that things in real life are probably (quite) different.

There is a major problem, however, in that all to often our use of folk psychology as the justification for explaining why a certain agent (or group of agents) acted the way they did is merely an example of the ‘Just So’ fallacy; an example of the inference to any old explanation (rather than an appeal to the best possible explanation). The problem with folk psychology (like all folk disciplines) is that it isn’t academic and rigourous; the evidence for the conclusion is often handpicked and annoying counterexamples, conflicting rationales and so on are often written out for no reason or glossed over as unimportant.

Now, just as the ‘Just So’ fallacy probably occurs more often in professional psychology than we would like to admit (and seems like a proper bogeyman to evolutionary psychologists) for the folk psychologist it is an ever present danger. Thus (good) folk psychologists must make sure that they are using plausible explanations that are not too bold, the story must not just fit the facts but must fit plausibly, to whit have good, defensible, motivations, intentions and reasons on the parts of the described agents. You cannot make the claim that ‘All the French are terrorists’ just because two persons of French nationality blew up a boat in your harbour.

Folk psychology is, it turns out, a rarefied notion and we can see this in the writings of Conspiracy Theorists. Take one group, those who hold that contemporary environmentalism is just Communism in a new hat. These Conspiracy Theorists use what I call ‘Petty Psychology;’ petty in that it is:

a) petty in its motivations (it smears people with the worst possible motivations, intentions and reasons),

and

b) petty in that it is an inference to any old explanation and thus not a considered opinion (thus think petty here as in regard to ‘petty thief’ or a ‘petty vengeance;’ actions not worth the agent’s time and effort).

People who saw Reds under the beds in the 60s and 70s were engaging in petty psychology. So are those who claim that contemporary environmentalism is redressed communism. Such theorists (and as my focus is on Conspiracy Theories I’ll think about Conspiracy Theorists) infer that as certain members of a greater group might have the motivations or intentions x, then all members of that group have the motivations or intentions x. This is, of course, inferring to an (intentional) explanation but it is not an example of an inference to the best possible explanation.

Petty psychology is not folk psychology because petty psychology only pretends to tell a plausible psychological story. Folk psychology is (usually) an example of the inference to a best explanation (although, really, it is probably more, once we admit that we’re engaging in folk notions, an example of the ‘inference to a pretty good explanation given that we aren’t actually psychologists’). Petty psychology is, at best, something psychologists (folk and otherwise) might study; by identifying someone’s petty psychology (i.e. what they vapidly infer about others) you could develop and refine your (proper and folk) psychological theories.

Petty psychology poses a problem, in respect to putative explanations (of which Conspiracy Theories are examples thereof) because petty psychologists use petty psychology to justify their explanatory inferences. There are, at least, two errors in reasoning that the petty psychologist commits, both of which are related to the ‘Just So’ fallacy (the inference to any old explanation).

The first error is that of the the petty inference; the petty psychologist commits the fallacy of the inference to any old explanation. They assume their story is the explanation (or best explanation, if we are charitable) rather than an (or any old) explanation.

Petty psychologists, unlike folk psychologists, base their psychological reasoning upon implausible or unjustified assumptions. They infer intentions and motivations for epistemic agents with the flimsiest of reasons. Take our aforementioned environmentalists, who are often cited as being redressed Communists. The petty psychologist takes common characteristics of one group (most environmentalists want state-regulated controls on what industry can and cannot do in regard to their emissions) and finds them in some other group (most communists want(ed) state-regulated control on what industry can and cannot do) and infers, from this, that both groups are the same.

(Given that my focus is on Conspiracy Theories my thesis about petty psychology is largely negative; petty psychologists infer the worst possible motivations and intentions to epistemic agents. However, petty psychology, plausibly, could be used to ‘justify’ positive character inferences; certain left-wing commentators might well use petty psychology to argue that the (presumably) left-wing government’s recent tax cuts where, in fact, socialist policy in disguise (rather than being indicative that the government is becoming more centrist).)

The second error, on the part of the petty psychologist, is that the petty psychologist not only does not admit to using petty psychology but they go so far as to insinuate that their proposed explanation of how the agent(s) acted is the actual psychological explanation. The petty psychologist could get away with petty psychology if they admitted that they are basing their putative explanation upon unjustified psychological premises (using such tactics as ‘Well, that’s my opinion’ or ‘You might think differently but I maintain that…’) but when petty psychology is presented as folk psychology or (even worse) psychology proper the petty psychologist is, in essence, arguing that their inference is an example of the inference to the best explanation. Thus the petty psychologist either thinks that their explanation is warranted or they believe they can persuade their audience to think that (In the latter case the petty psychologist might well be writing for other petty psychologists (or, at least) other similarly minded inferers).

Petty psychology is, I think, yet another rationale as to why we think that the term ‘Conspiracy Theory,’ as a label for a kind of explanation, is a pejorative. My proposed explanation, however, is no solace to those who are sceptical of Conspiracy Theories. Whilst it is true that a great many Conspiracy Theories rely quite heavily upon petty psychologies (such as the claim that as the Executive Branch of the Government of the United States of America seek a global imperium then all the associated agencies must also share the same motivation) this does not tell us that every Conspiracy Theory rests upon some petty psychology. Conspiracy Theories must still be analysed in respect to their content. More importantly, my thesis about petty psychology suggests that our view, that Conspiracy Theories are suspect, might be, in part, based upon a petty psychology itself. If we think that all Conspiracy Theorists are people like David Icke, Ian Wishart and Lyndon LaRouche then are we not guilty of the same inference to any old (psychological) explanation?

Answers on a postcard.

Yes, very good; now back to work, Skeptics

The most recent eSkeptic is a pat on the back for Skeptics everywhere in regard to their continued scepticism in re 9/11 Conspiracy Theories. I read it and I have to say that I thought ‘What the?’ for two biggish reasons.

1). The article assumes sceptics are skeptics.

Now, I tend to use ‘Skeptic’ to refer to the American variety, usually affiliated with Dr. Michael Shermer and (my sponsor) ‘The Amazing’ James Randi. There are other varieties, but usually, if I write ‘sceptic’ then I’m just talking about people with sceptical positions, some of which will be full-blown philosophical sceptics and others sceptical in one area, credulous in another, et al. The problem with the article, as I see it, is that it assumes people sceptical of 9/11 Conspiracy Theories are Skeptics.

This might be unfair, on my part; the article does focus a lot of attention on the Popular Mechanics article-turned-book and talks Shermer has given, and these are very definitely skeptical outcomes, but the other strand of argumentation, that skeptics everywhere have pounced upon 9/11 deniers’ websites and winnowed them down to nothing, seems to rely merely on the ambiguity between ‘skeptic’ and ‘sceptic.’ Not every sceptic is a skeptic; for instance, I’m a sceptic who is sceptical of beliefs held by skeptics…

(For a more nuanced look at the role of scepticism, in re 9/11 denial, I’d recommend taking a look at Steve Clarke’s ‘Conspiracy Theories and the Internet: Controlled Demolition and Arrested Development’ from the ‘Episteme’ special issue on Conspiracy Theories. My summary of it is here. Basically, people are sceptical of wacky claims on the internet and sometimes not for principled reasons whatsoever…)

2). It’s all very well being skeptical of 9/11 Conspiracy Theories but really, get with the programme. If this is your great success story, your ‘pat on the back’ moment,’ then it’s also a tacit admission that the Skeptics have, by and large, failed in their ability to pull it together in regard to applying their skepticism towards Climate Change Denial Conspiracy Theories. The Skeptics (well, some of their leading figures) have come late to the realisation that anthropogenic climate change is a reality and there is still some infighting in their ranks about the issue. If they really want to have a good reason to get together and hug each other, then this is the one to look towards.