Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Truth and Value

I've often said that value derives from desire fulfillment. But perhaps I have this backwards. It seems plausible to suggest that desires aim at value, rather than produce it. This would be analogous to the common understanding that belief 'aims at' truth. On this picture, value is something objective (mind-independent), and it is the role of our desires to recognise this value in the world. The ideal agent would desire all and only things of worth, much as he would believe all and only truths.

One might complain that we can't actually separate value from desires. That is, our only acquaintance with value is through our desires - we have no direct access to the 'objective values'. So we have no reason to think there is any such thing, above and beyond our desires themselves.

But this objection may be too strong, for it seems to apply just as well to truth! "Our only acquaintance with truth is through our beliefs - we have no direct access to the 'objective truth'. So we have no reason to think there is any such thing, above and beyond our beliefs themselves."

We might appeal to the possibility of learning, and argue that there must be something objectively real that we are learning about. We often judge that our past beliefs were mistaken. This might seem to require objective truth (to provide a standard for such judgments). Similar claims could be made of our desires: something desired can turn out to be bad for us. However, such judgments can only be made in light of other desires (e.g. one might deem smoking bad after realising that it conflicts with one's desire for good health). So we need not appeal to 'objective values' after all. But the same holds of truth: we can only judge a past belief false in light of our new beliefs. So wouldn't this argument lead us to also reject objective truth?

This is a problem for me, because I want to say that truth is objective [belief-independent], yet value is subjective [desire-dependent]. But the close analogy between belief/truth and desire/value makes it difficult to justify treating the two pairs differently.

A big problem I have with the 'objective value' picture is that it leaves 'value' a complete mystery. What is, or constitutes, value? How does it exist, and in what form? What makes something valuable but something else not - what difference in their makeup explains this difference in worth? It seems that none of these questions have meaningful answers, unless we use something like the desire-based reduction I've previously advocated.

Perhaps here we finally have a disanalogy with truth. Perhaps objective truth is understandable in a way that objective value is not. Truth is just how things really are. It's an intuitive concept that we can easily grasp. It requires no further explanation. Perhaps a value-objectivist could say that value is just "what things are really worth". But although there may be no logical basis for judging this explanation any worse, I simply can't make intuitive sense of it. I think I understand objective existence (though I might be misleading myself). I'm sure I don't understand objective worth. But I'm not sure whether that's a good enough reason to treat them differently.

I should note that we don't actually require mind-independence (of truth or value) in order to normatively evaluate beliefs and desires. As I've said before:
We can evaluate a desire against how well it would help us fulfill all our other desires. So we can reconcile DF with the idea that desires aim for wellbeing - it's just that this 'aim' presupposes some set of (other) desires to evaluate our wellbeing against.

So we can have a sort of quasi-objectivity even if value is mind-dependent. Does the same hold for truth? It might. Suppose we held 'truth' to simply be coherence with our other beliefs. Then we could still evaluate our beliefs in terms of how well they cohere with all our other beliefs. The odd ones out could be deemed 'false', just as a conflicting desire will be called 'bad'. In neither case do we need to appeal to a mind-independent reality for underlying structure. Coherence within our superficial mental structures is enough.

This is troubling - I'm actually half-tempted to dismiss the correspondance theory of truth after all!

The benefit of positing an external world (of mind-independent truths) is that it can help explain why we have the experiences and beliefs that we do. Is there any corresponding benefit to positing the existence of external values? This I'm not sure about. I think we can have naturalistic normative explanations (e.g. "Bob failed the exam because he didn't study as much as he should have"), i.e. ones which can be 'reduced' to purely descriptive facts. I can't imagine how any irreducibly normative facts could ever figure in worldly explanations, however.

So I think this provides some grounds for rejecting non-naturalistic theories of 'objective value', at least. Could one have naturalistic value grounded in mind-independent natural facts? It's not something I know anything about, but I guess it must be possible. If such a theory - with genuine explanatory power - was offered, then the analogy with truth might make it very hard for me to reject it. (But then, I probably wouldn't want to reject it - I don't find subjectivism all that appealing; it's just that I haven't yet come across any plausible [i.e. naturalistic] alternatives!)

What do you think? Should we accept both objective truth and value, or reject both, or do we have grounds for discriminating between the two?

6 comments:

  1. One could invoke Peirce and say what everyone would agree upon in the long run is what the truth is. That allows a kind of objectivity that would apply to values as well.  

    Posted by Clark Goble

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  2. "How things really are" is reality, which, to repeat the cliche is the stuff that doesn't go away when you stop believing in it. I think truth is more subjective in that it is the interaction of reality and belief. The same reality can result in different truths for different people depending on their world view. 

    Posted by TomV

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  3. "what everyone would agree upon in the long run is what the truth is"

    That's an interesting view. Though it assumes that passing time will lead to convergence in beliefs (and values, if we apply it to them too)... is that a safe assumption to make? 

    Posted by Richard

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  4. Peirce combines it with some views of evolution (in the broad sense) that I'm not sure everyone would agree upon. Further his "in the long run" might entail it to be an infinite time.

    As to whether everyone would agree. Heck, it's philosophy. The one thing we can be sure of is that not everyone will agree! (grin)
     

    Posted by Clark

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  5. Do you know anything about alethic anti-realism? I don't, but this puzzle reminds me of the little bit I've heard of it. Check out the comments thread to this FBC entry. 

    Posted by Jonathan

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  6. The benefit of positing an external world (of mind-independent truths) is that it can help explain why we have the experiences and beliefs that we do. Is there any corresponding benefit to positing the existence of external values? This I'm not sure about. I think we can have naturalistic normative explanations (e.g. "Bob failed the exam because he didn't study as much as he should have"), i.e. ones which can be 'reduced' to purely descriptive facts. I can't imagine how any irreducibly normative facts could ever figure in worldly explanations, however.


    I think you are wrong in conceiving the role of reality (vis-a-vis the subject states, i.e. of belief) to be "what helps explaining why we have the experiences and beliefs that we do". For 2 reasons:
    1. reality does not explain experiences
    2. reality probably does not explain beliefs (except trivial explanations like "x believed that P, because P"). Given what you say about coherentism, and given that a perfectly reasonable explanation of our beliefs can be given in terms of the reasons we have to keep them, it is other beliefs that do the work of explaining beliefs, not reality.
    3. what does it mean to explain a belief? For me: to show what justifies it. For the only certain theory about beliefs is the following: they tend to disappear when they are not justified, they tend to persist when they are justified. So the fundamental role of reality, if it is that of explaining beliefs, must be that of justifying beliefs. But that is exactly what you want to deny (since you are a coherentist).

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