So let's suppose that after all this discussion of what knowledge is, we end up saying, well, actually we do want to use the word knowledge in a way that reflects our use in ordinary language. We want to allow that. I can know the train is time to leave it 1736, even though I might be dreaming. Maybe we want to allow the contextual list to apply. Different levels of knowledge and different different circumstances.
And we certainly don't want to insist that only super rational beings who reflect on all their beliefs and justifications can know things quite the reverse. We want to accept that dogs and cats can know things. We're happy to say that ordinary, unreflective people can know things when there are reliable connexions between their faculties and the truth, even if they can't explain what those connexions are. So this naturally leads us back to externalism as an attractive account of knowledge.
This enables me to claim that I do know this is a hand. Even if I can't prove it. And even if I can't know that I know it. Whether I do, in fact, know, it depends on how things stand outside my mind, the various causal links between the world and my perceptions and so forth. As long as they're working fine, then I can have knowledge, just as the dog can have knowledge.
I don't have to be an expert, philosopher or an expert in human perception for my perceptual faculties to operate correctly and give me knowledge. But the sceptic is still lurking in the wings. Let's suppose we accept all I've said. Suppose we accept that the word knowledge as it's used in ordinary language, fits with this sort of external list account and can quite properly be used in the various loose waves I've described.
That doesn't actually defeat the sceptic because the sceptic can say, well, look, if what you say is right, if your beliefs are in fact true. Then I'll accept that, you know, all these things in this ordinary language since. But I still challenge you that those beliefs might be false. So even if scepticism can be answered from a God's like, externals point of view, God can look down and say Milliken's faculties are working fine.
So he does, in fact, know that there's a hand there. The question whether they're actually true can still be asked from the internal perspective. I can't necessarily know that I know. So I can still raise sceptical problems about things that from a God's eye point of view. I do supposedly know. So is there any answer to this kind of scepticism?
Well, surprisingly, perhaps one rather prominent answer, which aims to show that we can be confident of some of our basic perceptual beliefs, has come from the direction of the analysis of ordinary language. So suppose I refer to this and I call it a hand. And I conclude that there are two hands of a really. Of a really hands. You might think. No. For all you know, your brain in a VAT, your dreaming, whatever. Okay, let's suppose I am, in fact, a brain in a vat.
OK. I'm a brain in the VAT. I look at this. I look at this. I think there's something there. Let's not worry about where there is. I'm aware of something and I call this a hand. And if these are actually hand images. Then when I use the word hand to refer to them. I'm referring to hand images. OK. But if when I say hand, I mean a hand image, then this is a hand after all. Even if I'm a brain in a VAT.
This, which I call a hand, is a hand good, maybe from a God's eye point of view that just hand images from my point of view. That's what I call a hand. So if even if I am a brain in a vat, I can say with Gillmore there's a hand, there's another. If the meaning of hand is determined by what we're actually referring to, it looks like the sceptic can be defeated. Or at least I need not worry about whether this is really a hand. This must be a hand, because that's what I mean by hand.
And that's the kind of approach that Putnam suggests. Now, you might well think that's a little bit too quick. It's not really a very satisfactory answer to the sceptic. I think that worries. Right. Here's how I might spell it out. When I look at this thing, I think there's an object there which is actually moving in space. And whose movement is systematically correlated with my perception in such a way that my perceptions give a directly reliable indicator of where it is.
I have an idea of the sort of causal interaction which is responsible for these perceptions in terms of light shining on my hand bouncing off. I see it with my eyes and so forth. And that's a very different picture from the picture of some mad scientists manipulating electrodes or running some computer programme, which is bringing it about my perceptions correlate as though they were an object, their.
So maybe I can make some sense of God's eye point of view from which it would turn out that what I call a hand is really nothing like what I take to be a hand. In that case, the Puttnam approach can be challenged. It won't follow that when I say there's a hand, I can be utterly sure that that's true. If what's really there is nothing that bears any systematic correlation to what I'm perceiving except through the manipulation of some mad scientist.
And there's another problem with Putnam's approach. Let's step back from the vet for a moment and return me to real life, okay. I know what a hand is. There's a hand. I'm walking along in Oxford one day on my way to a lecture and I get kidnapped and invited. Some mad scientist extracts my brain and puts it in a vat. Forget about all this, of course, I'm given the illusion of coming to a lecture. I look at this and I say he has a hand. But actually, it's just a hand image.
And now it looks like Putnam's approach isn't going to work because I learnt the use of the word hand by referring to real hands. So when I say hand, I mean a real hand. I don't mean a hand image, in which case I can raise the sceptical worry. Maybe this isn't a real hand. Maybe I am a brain in a vat. So needless to say, the bogey of scepticism comes back, as indeed it usually does. There's no magic bullet to defeat the sceptic, and at least Putnam hasn't given us one.
Finally, I want to go back to induction. The Puttnam approach might lead you to the following thought. Leaving aside the worry about being kidnapped and invested, suppose we worried that our whole life is lived in a VAT or in the Matrix or something like that. It's tempting to think, well, suppose I am a brain in a vat. Suppose I am in a matrix. Why should I care? I'm living my life perfectly well. Maybe it is in The Matrix, but that doesn't stop me enjoying the things that I enjoy.
Doesn't stop me getting satisfaction from the company of Matrix, people eating night. Nice matrix food or whatever. You might, however, wonder where this leaves issues about moral obligation to those matrixx people. But let's put that to one side. All these matrix things, they may not be real, but they bring me the same pleasure. So why worry about it? Why not just go on as before?
Even if I am a brain in a vat, even if I am living in the Matrix now seem like this vertical scepticism that is worrying about inference from one level, the level of perception to some deeper level, the level of objects. Can seem not so worrying after all. And there's a contrast here with horizontal tunnel scepticism, the kind of scepticism that you get in the problem of induction.
And that will remain even if you're happy with living in the Matrix or as a brain in a VAT, everything so far might have gotten gone on fine. But how can I be confident that it will carry on going on? Fine. This problem, the problem of induction arises whether I'm in the real world or in a matrix or a brain in a VAT.
So there's a sense in which horizontal scepticism, that is scepticism about inferring more of the same, though it seems less radical, is actually potentially more worrying than vertical scepticism. And this gives me an excuse, having gone back to human induction, to look at the kind of response that he gave and is commonly given now to these kinds of sceptical worries. And that is to focus on the ethics of belief. What should we believe?
Descartes started out his scepticism, saying that he shouldn't believe anything that is less than certain. The message of all the discussion about scepticism is that if we do determine ourselves not to believe anything that is less than certain, we might end up believing virtually nothing at all. But is that possible? Are we able to believe nothing at all? And should we even go along with it? Why should we condemn ourselves to believing nothing that is less than certain?
Well, I think most philosophers would agree with Hume that suspension of all belief is just impossible for us the way we're made. We just cannot help believing certain things. And it's probably a good thing that we're made that way, because if we weren't, then we'd be in serious trouble. Notice also that this approach goes well with contemporary externalism. The thought is that we shouldn't aim for all our beliefs to be such that we can justify them internally.
We shouldn't expect to be able to work out internally the justification for everything we believe. Perhaps we have to rely on our animal nature. That leads us inevitably to believe certain things and to trust in general that our faculties are thankfully more or less reliable. Course, that doesn't mean that we should become undiscriminating and remain big questions about how to distinguish between things that remain justified and things that aren't.
But if we want to hold out against the sceptic, we probably have to be prepared to accept standards that are less than absolute.
