Ben Stowell
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Dual economy system
Friday, November 14, 2025
On the criteria of best philosopher
Per the book A Companion to Philosophy in Australia and New Zealand, by Graham Oppy and Nick Trakakis, JJC Smart was a Christian when he was appointed at the University of Adelaide, but became a thoroughgoing atheist materialist at some point. He would have been at least 29 years old, potentially indicating a deep change of mind. But I don't know how deep Smart's Christian worldview was prior to converting, or how difficult the conversion was.
If I'm not mistaken, William Rowe had a similar late-and-thorough conversion from Christianity to atheism, and so did contemporary philosopher Felipe Leon.
Because philosophy is, at its core, the love for truth above all else, I feel like those philosophers that represent philosophy the best are those who most painstakingly give up prior beliefs for the sake of truth. Camus says in The Myth that "Beginning to think is beginning to be undermined." There's something special about that person who is willing to undermine themselves and sacrifice their deepest self-conception and their most desired beliefs for the truth, committing a sort of metaphysical death and rebirth in the process. So if you especially weigh this criterion, then these philosophers are the best.
But this criterion has at least two problems: One, as already mentioned, it's difficult to know which philosophers changed their minds and how thorough and painstaking was the change. Two, the virtue works both ways: an atheist who painstakingly becomes a Christian would too be a best philosopher. I think that fairly characterizes C. S. Lewis. But I wouldn't consider C. S. Lewis to be a good philosopher at all, mainly because he got just about everything wrong. More specifically, C. S. Lewis a) Did not create a systematic philosophy; b) Left many important philosophical problems unaddressed; c) Of the philosophical problems he did address, did not address them in a comprehensive or sophisticated way (like arguments for and against the existence of God, for example); d) Failed to address serious challenges to Christian belief; e) Especially failed to solve the problem of evil, not that any theist ever could.
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
The intellectual virtues of lifespace and access to resources
One of the most important intellectual virtues is lifespace. Consider a Muslim teenager who becomes an atheist. If his Muslim parents were to find out, it would be awkward or worse. To build out his new naturalistic worldview, he wants to write public blogposts and post public YouTube videos expressing his views and working through the philosophical puzzles he’s struggling with. This practice of talking out loud and connecting to other philosophically inclined folks across the internet is essential to him for processing information and developing his philosophical skills. He also wishes he could major in Philosophy at university. But he’s scared to express his views publicly in fear of his family and community finding out. Because he relies on his parents for education funding, and because of the economic non-viability of philosophy, he’s scared to pursue a Philosophy major. So instead of focusing on expressing himself, developing his worldview, and engaging with like-minded individuals, he focuses instead on trying to achieve financial independence. The teenager focuses on another career that can pay the bills. But that career has nothing to do with developing one’s intellectual virtue and philosophical knowledge. Many careers stifle one’s intellectual virtue and retard one’s philosophical development. Plus, the teenager wants more than anything to pursue philosophy, and so being deprived of this pursuit leads to chronic stress, and chronic stress is known to severely hurt one’s mental health and brain health, which in turn hurts one’s intellectual virtue. So we can see how a lack of lifespace leads to a loss of intellectual virtue, and indeed a lack of lifespace is perhaps the single greatest cause of the extreme lacuna of intellectual virtue we see in society. We also see how social structures tend to be anti-intellectual in nature, because maintaining one's status in a social structure requires going along with established narratives no matter how absurd and clearly false they may be.
Lifespace alone is not enough, though. Another intellectual virtue is access to philosophy resources. That means: 1) Reading materials, 2) Mentorship & training, and 3) Participation in philosophical communities and extended conversations across a wide variety of topics with a wide variety of people. Considering how rare it is to have the lifespace and access to resources needed, it’s no wonder that intellectual virtue is rare. Because becoming rich and powerful often has nothing to do with virtue, and indeed often has more to do with a lack of virtue, it's no surprise that intellectual virtue is especially rare among the rich and powerful. In a metaphorical sense then, what Jesus says is true when he says that it's harder for a rich man to go to heaven than for a camel to fit in the eye of a needle.
Monday, November 3, 2025
Inseparable subjectivity - Part 3: Inseparable subjectivity
E.g. The experiences of being stung by a wasp, jumping into cold water, and biting into a chocolate chip cookie all have something in common: the fact that these experiences are happening to you. There is a youness, a subjectivity, that these experiences have in common.
Person(2b) = The other properties of first-person properties that accompany the pure subjectivity by which all first-person properties are unified.
E.g. The experiences of being stung by a wasp, jumping into cold water, and biting into a chocolate chip cookie have differences between them. That which distinguishes one experience from the other—the pain of venom in your veins versus the pain of the initial shock of cold water versus the happiness of the taste of melted chocolate—these differences show that these experiences cannot be the same, despite having a sameness to them, specifically the same subjectivity.
You(2a) is the ‘you’ referred to in the following sentence: You do not choose to be what you are. You do not choose to have the intelligence, rationality, or knowledge that you have. So you do not choose for your decision-making process to be what it is. So you do not choose for your choices to come out as they do. The badness (or goodness) of your choices reflects the badness (or goodness) of your inputs, but not the badness (or goodness) of you.
But you(2b) is the 'you' referred to in the following sentence: The choices you made were good / bad / praiseworthy / critique-worthy. I.e. the causal properties accompanying the pure subjectivity of first-person properties had good / bad / praiseworthy / critique-worthy effects.”
Two thoughts:
One, even if we allow a distinction between Person(2a) and Person(2b), it’s not clear that 2a is as non-causal as I claimed. If I have stressful experiences, and those stressful first-person properties cause my body to produce stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, then the “pure subjectivity” of being on the receiving end of experience actually does play a role in causal relationships. Plus, presumably pure experiences cause me to remember having those experiences. So pure subjectivity causes memory. Furthermore, memories reveal patterns that affect future actions. By remembering the pain of touching a hot stove, I avoid touching hot stoves in the future. So by causing memories, not only does pure subjectivity play a causal role, but a causal role with respect to our actions.
Two, it’s not clear that the distinction between 2a and 2b makes sense. If I treat subjectivity as a consistent property that survives through time (to explain how a person survives through time), then it sounds like I’m sneaking in the idea of a mental substance, of a subjectivity that exists independently from everything else and is subject to qualia. That’s a problem for bundle theory, which says that there are no substances, only properties. If instead I say that wherever there is a subjective property, there is personhood, and paint this picture that there is no stable, persistent, substantial, mysterious self – and that instead there is a succession of subjective properties and a directly observable, unmysterious self – then it seems like I must consider subjectivity not something separate from the subjective properties. If your subjective properties are you, then your subjective properties involved in your choices and feelings are you. So the pure subjectivity of 2a cannot be separated from the other properties, 2b, that accompany 2a.
By abstracting out my subjectivity in common with all my subjective properties, I am beholding my subjective property not as something particular and concrete, but universal and abstract. But persons are concrete, not abstract! The self is as particular and concrete as it gets. So to avoid the mistake of talking about the concept of myself when I should be talking about myself, I must avoid abstracting out subjectivity.
It seems that I have been assuming that the subjectivity of a property can be separated from ugly (or admirable) aspects of that property. For example, if someone makes the conscious, unconstrained decision to kill someone out of spite, there’s a subjectivity to that choice. But this subjectivity is replete throughout the property such that the entire property is subjective. We cannot separate the subjectivity from the rest of the property. So the ugliness of the subjectivity just is the ugliness of the entire subjective property, and thus the person.
Imagine the feeling of being judged. It's a sharp pain, which makes it vivid and easy to imagine. Is it possible to separate the feeling of being judged from the subjectivity? No. The experience is necessarily experiential. There is no pain floating around out there without a person to feel it. Pain is by its essence felt. Likewise, there is no subjectivity floating around out there without other properties characterizing that experience. Subjectivity is by its essence a particular kind of experience. So for a painful feeling, like being judged, you can't have the pain without the subjectivity, and you can't have the subjectivity without the pain. The subjectivity is replete and inseparable.
But if a person per se is identical to their subjective properties (the person per se of the moment is identical to the subjective property of that moment), then any criticism or praise directed to the ugly or admirable aspects of the subjective property are directed to the person per se (at the moment of that property).
If this is right, and if our choices come with a subjective property (the quale of making a choice), then we are our choices, just as we are our pains and pleasures and any other subjective property. If by ‘person’ we mean a collection of subjective properties that all have the same subjectivity in common, then our experiences (including experiences of making choices) are straightforwardly part of us.
Far from eliminating free will, this might provide the very resources to build an account of how free will works! Namely, that because a) our choices accompany phenomenal choice, and because b) wherever there is phenomenology there is personhood, therefore c) to criticize or praise a choice just is to criticize or praise the phenomenology, which just is to criticize or praise the person with that personhood.
Friday, October 31, 2025
Inseparable subjectivity – Part 2: Critical vs moral blame
Person(1) = Public person = Your public person is that thing that generates within others certain experiences, such as visual experiences of a certain shape or auditory experiences of a certain sound (like the sound of your voice).
Person(2) = Private person = Your private self is any subjective / experiential / first-person / phenomenological property that carries a particular youness to it.
Because this is a phenomenal definition, it’s no surprise that it would be circular – i.e. you = those subjective properties that correspond to… you. The circularity is benign because phenomenal definitions must gesture toward a phenomenology. Compare: red = the red color, another phenomenal definition that is circular in a benign way, gesturing toward the phenomenology of seeing redness. Just as ‘red’ gestures toward the red experience you have, ‘you’ gestures toward the youness of any experience you have.
You can make further distinctions like where ‘you’ refers to the total experiences you caused others or the total experiences you’ve had. For now, these two key distinctions are enough.
I’ve made a distinction between moral versus critical blame, which basically means blaming Person(2) versus blaming Person(1), respectively. That is, to blame a person critically is to criticize the quality of their public properties. To blame a person morally is to criticize the quality of their phenomenal properties.
There’s two other distinctions of blame at work: Blame as cause and blame as blameworthy / blameless cause (or creditworthy / creditless), i.e., whether you are the cause in a way that reflects the quality of you. X can fail to be the cause of Y, explaining why the quality of Y says nothing about the quality of X. For example, I fail to be the cause of the 2015 earthquake in Nepal (so I claim), and so the badness of this disaster says nothing about the badness of me. Or, X can succeed in being the cause of Y, but in such a way that the quality of Y says nothing about the quality of X. For example, a baby succeeds in being the cause of accidentally knocking over a vase and breaking it. The badness of breaking the vase says nothing about the badness of the baby.
But that’s too quick. The badness of breaking the vase does say something about the badness of the baby: the baby can cause bad experiences in others by breaking their vases. So Baby(1) is extrinsically bad. But the badness of breaking the vase says nothing about the badness of the baby’s phenomenal properties, as the baby’s phenomenal properties had nothing to do with causing the vase to break. So Baby(2) is blameless with respect to breaking the vase.
But even if the baby’s phenomenal properties did have something to do with causing the vase to break, that wouldn’t necessarily mean that Baby(2) is bad. If the baby grows up and is now a teenager, and the teenager chooses to break the vase, and thus the teenager has a phenomenal property of making a choice, and if we allow for mental causation, then the teenager’s phenomenal properties do cause the vase to break. So doesn’t that mean that the badness of breaking the vase says something about the badness of Teenager(2)? Yes and no.
If we allow for mental causation, then Person(2) is embedded within Person(1), because “that thing that generates within others certain experiences” includes those phenomenal properties, like those involved in making choices, that cause one’s actions which then generate experiences within others. So if the badness of Y reflects the badness of what causes Y, then the badness of bad experiences reflects the badness of that which caused those bad experiences. And so both public and private properties of personhood can be extrinsically bad.
But we can imagine Pereboom-style manipulation cases where a person is manipulated into having properties, public or private, which cause those bad experiences within others. But whose fault is it that these badness-causing properties obtain? The fault lies with the source of the manipulation. But our deterministic (or random) inputs, like our genetics, social influences, and so on, all together comprise such a manipulator. We do not choose to be what we are. We do not choose to have the intelligence, rationality, or knowledge that we have. So we do not choose for our decision-making process to be what it is. So we do not choose for our choices to come out as they do. The badness of our choices reflects the badness of our inputs, but not the badness of us. The badness of our choices does reflect the badness of us as choosers within such and such contexts (e.g., reflects our stupidity, irrationality, ignorance, etc.), but not the badness of us as experiencers, as pure subjects (i.e., as experiencers we did not choose to be stupid or irrational or ignorant, but we experience our stupidity, irrationality, ignorance, etc.).
Our first-person properties come from somewhere. They do not come, ultimately, from us, i.e., our first-person properties do not ultimately come from other first-person properties of ours. They come ultimately from sources outside of us.
What this comes to is that at bottom, the most fundamental self-property is the property of pure subjectivity, a property that is divorced from any choices made. This first-person property is not involved in the making of any choices, and so its quality cannot be fairly criticized.
To capture the distinction between those first-person properties that can be fairly criticized and those that cannot be fairly criticized, we must split Person(2) in two:
Person(2a) = The pure subjectivity (of a particular person) by which all first-person properties (of that particular person) are unified.
Person(2b) = The other properties of first-person properties that accompany the pure subjectivity by which all first-person properties are unified.
Thursday, October 23, 2025
Spencer Case on evolutionary debunking arguments against moral realism
*So evolutionary debunking arguments, just like in epistemic cases, do not work against self-evident beliefs, and the pain of a burn is self-evidently bad.
Monday, October 20, 2025
56 Questions on Morality
2) Self-descriptive metaethics: What do you mean when you use the above moral terms and make claims using those terms?
3) Prescriptive metaethics: What should people mean when they use the above moral terms and make claims using those terms?
4) What does it mean for something to be good or bad? What is the good-maker of good things and the bad-maker of bad things?
5) What is well-being? What does it mean to live a good life?
6) Can goals be good or bad, better or worse? What should the ultimate goal of the human being be?
7) What does it mean for something to be objective or objectively true? (More generally: What does it mean for something to be true?) What does it mean for something to be subjective or subjectively true? What does it mean for something to be true in a relative sense versus true in an absolute sense? What does it mean for a truth or claim to be stance-independent or judgment independent? What is a stance or a judgment?
8) What is value? Are there facts about value? (Generally: What are facts?) Is value objective or subjective?
9) If there are judgment-independent value facts or moral facts, does this mean there are judgment-independent gustatory facts or aesthetic facts? Why or why not?
10) What are mistakes? Can someone be mistaken about what’s good or bad?
11) What is poor reasoning? Can someone exercise poor reasoning over what’s good and bad?
12) What is normativity?
13) What does ‘should’ and ‘ought’ mean?
14) Can we derive an ought from an is? Why or why not?
15) How does description differ from prescription?
16) What is a categorical imperative? What is a hypothetical imperative?
17) Is there a categorical imperative?
18) Is there an irreducible normative property? What would that look like?
19) Are moral claims meaningful? If yes, then what makes moral claims meaningful? (Generally: What does it mean for a statement to be meaningful?)
20) What are moral intuitions, and what role do they play in our moral theories? (Generally: What are intuitions, and what role do they play in our philosophical theories?)
21) Are moral intuitions data? Are our intrinsic goods and evils data? Why or why not?
22) How does moral normativity (what we ought to do) relate to epistemic normativity (what we ought to believe)?
23) What does it mean for something to be right or wrong? What is the right-maker of right actions and the wrong-maker of wrong actions?
24) Is there a difference between epistemic wrongness and moral wrongness? “The sun is smaller than the moon” is wrong. Killing a child for fun is wrong. Sending a person to prison for a crime they did not commit is wrong. Does ‘wrong’ mean the same thing in both cases?
25) Are there moral facts? If so, what are they?
26) Are there moral mistakes? Can someone be mistaken about what’s right or wrong?
27) Is morality objective or subjective?
28) Is there objectively good and bad moral reasoning? (Generally: Is there objectively good and bad reasoning?)
29) If there is moral knowledge, how do we obtain it? If there are moral facts, then how do we discover them? (Generally: If there is knowledge, how do we obtain it?)
30) Are there morally justified and unjustified actions?
31) What does it mean for an action to be justified, and how does that relate to holding a justified belief?
32) Are there external reasons, or are reasons only internal? (Generally: What are reasons?)
33) How can we tell whether a reason for acting is motivating versus justifying?
34) If someone has a reason to act, must they be motivated to act?
35) Are humans ultimately always motivated by their own pursuit of happiness? Does this make all humans implicit egoists? Is genuine altruism possible? If not, does this threaten the moral value of our actions? Why or why not?
36) What is the difference between moral reasoning and prudential reasoning?
37) How do reasons relate to moral justification?
38) Why be moral? Why be a good person? Why care about these things? How do these questions relate to the question: Why be rational?
39) What are rights?
40) Who has rights or should have them?
41) What are moral obligations? Who has them and when? How do we discover what our obligations are?
42) Which actions are supererogatory, and how can we tell?
43) How great should the moral burden we place on ourselves be? How hard should we strive to be moral, and why?
44) What is justice and injustice?
45) Does anybody deserve anything? What are just deserts? What does it mean to deserve something?
46) How does punishment relate to justice?
47) What is moral responsibility? How does it relate to blameworthiness, blamelessness, and free will?
48) What does it mean to be a moral agent or to have “agency”?
49) Is it possible to knowingly do what’s wrong? Or does everybody always do what they think in the moment is best, in some cases making highly conflicted choices, and in some cases coming to believe that they made the wrong choice?
50) What does it mean to forgive? When should we forgive or withhold forgiveness?
51) If actions are made wrong by something, what is it? Are they made wrong by their consequences, or by the nature of the actions themselves (e.g. a lack of good will behind the action), or by the viciousness of the kind of person who would engage in that kind of action? Or is it all of the above depending on context (pluralism)? Or is it something else (e.g. rationalism)?
52) Can we subsume moral concerns surrounding good will and treating people as ends unto themselves under consequences? Why or why not?
53) What is virtue? What is vice? Are some actions knowably virtuous or knowably vicious? If so, how?
54) Can we subsume moral concerns surrounding virtue under consequences? Why or why not?
55) Where does morality come from? To what degree is morality selected for by evolution? In what ways, if any, is morality a social construct? Do debunking arguments give us reason to doubt the existence of moral facts, or to doubt the objectivity of morality?
56) How would a best Divine Command Theory—or any theistic metaethical system—spell out God’s relationship to goodness and badness, right and wrong, the objectivity of morality, God’s obligations—or lack thereof—toward creation, and God’s status as a moral agent?