drug_mentor
Bluelight Crew
So a while ago I was reading some of Bernard Williams work and I came across an interesting argument for the conclusion that people do not choose their beliefs. I do not wish to take credit for this argument, as I am essentially paraphrasing Williams. The argument is taken from the paper 'Deciding to Believe' which I read in Problems of the Self by Bernard Williams.
I have long suspected that the idea of choosing one's beliefs is incoherent, but I found Williams' argument both interesting and accessible enough to share here. I thought it might be interesting to connect up discussion of whether people can choose their beliefs with a discussion of whether we should pass ethical judgements on others for their beliefs. If people can't choose their beliefs, it seems highly questionable whether they ought to be morally condemned for them.
What follows is Williams' argument against choosing to believe:
Beliefs aim at truth, by this I mean that the following three claims are true of them: (i) Beliefs can be assessed as being true or false; (ii) To believe that p is to believe that p is true; (iii) Assertions of the form 'I believe that p' in general report than more a psychological state, they report that p is true.
The fact that beliefs aim at truth suggests that there is something quite problematic about the idea of deciding to believe something. If I could consciously will myself to form the belief that p, then it seems I could acquire the belief that p whether or not I had any grounds for thinking p was true. Furthermore, I would know that I was able to acquire the belief irrespective of its truth. If I could consciously decide to 'believe' that p regardless of whether I had any antecedent reason for thinking that p might be true, it is not clear that prior to acquiring this 'belief' I could genuinely regard the state which I was about to produce in myself as a belief, i.e. as a state which purports to reflect reality.
Suppose I was able to carry out such a procedure, there does seem to be an incoherence in thinking that I could know that I willed myself to 'believe' that p (irrespective of whether I had any reason to think p were true) and still regard this as a belief I hold, i.e. something I take to be true. It seems, then, that in order to believe that p is true, I could not be conscious of the fact that I had acquired it at will (possibly arbitrarily). If this is right, then it seems in the act of willing myself to believe that p I must necessarily also forget that I had so willed it. But, is there any reason for thinking that, as well as the ability to will ourselves to believe, we also have a reliable faculty which permits us to intentionally forget? Perhaps there are some cases like this (though, I am inclined to think otherwise); but, at the least the foregoing considerations suggest there is something highly suspect about the notion of 'choosing to believe'.
What do people make of this argument? What about the idea of choosing beliefs more generally? If people don't choose their beliefs, is it fair to pass moral judgements on others for their beliefs?
I have long suspected that the idea of choosing one's beliefs is incoherent, but I found Williams' argument both interesting and accessible enough to share here. I thought it might be interesting to connect up discussion of whether people can choose their beliefs with a discussion of whether we should pass ethical judgements on others for their beliefs. If people can't choose their beliefs, it seems highly questionable whether they ought to be morally condemned for them.
What follows is Williams' argument against choosing to believe:
Beliefs aim at truth, by this I mean that the following three claims are true of them: (i) Beliefs can be assessed as being true or false; (ii) To believe that p is to believe that p is true; (iii) Assertions of the form 'I believe that p' in general report than more a psychological state, they report that p is true.
The fact that beliefs aim at truth suggests that there is something quite problematic about the idea of deciding to believe something. If I could consciously will myself to form the belief that p, then it seems I could acquire the belief that p whether or not I had any grounds for thinking p was true. Furthermore, I would know that I was able to acquire the belief irrespective of its truth. If I could consciously decide to 'believe' that p regardless of whether I had any antecedent reason for thinking that p might be true, it is not clear that prior to acquiring this 'belief' I could genuinely regard the state which I was about to produce in myself as a belief, i.e. as a state which purports to reflect reality.
Suppose I was able to carry out such a procedure, there does seem to be an incoherence in thinking that I could know that I willed myself to 'believe' that p (irrespective of whether I had any reason to think p were true) and still regard this as a belief I hold, i.e. something I take to be true. It seems, then, that in order to believe that p is true, I could not be conscious of the fact that I had acquired it at will (possibly arbitrarily). If this is right, then it seems in the act of willing myself to believe that p I must necessarily also forget that I had so willed it. But, is there any reason for thinking that, as well as the ability to will ourselves to believe, we also have a reliable faculty which permits us to intentionally forget? Perhaps there are some cases like this (though, I am inclined to think otherwise); but, at the least the foregoing considerations suggest there is something highly suspect about the notion of 'choosing to believe'.
What do people make of this argument? What about the idea of choosing beliefs more generally? If people don't choose their beliefs, is it fair to pass moral judgements on others for their beliefs?
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