TheTrendyCynic
Member
This is an expansion and continuation of the discussion I began in the Evidentialism thread, and addresses the response to that post made by No*s. It shouldn't be necessary to read those posts if you haven't already; I believe I've adequately summarized them here.
OBJECTIVIST EPISTEMOLOGY
Objectivist epistemology differs from other schools of philosophy in that it asserts that reality is real. This tautology should be meaningless, but at the heart of any objection to Objectivism is a denial of this 'empty' fact. Objectivism asserts that we are able to apprehend this objective reality: It asserts that knowledge is objective, that the analytic/synthetic dichotomy does not exist, and that logic is the one and only arbiter of objective truth.
Objectivism condemns as illogical and irrational any school of thought that introduces any chasm between reality and man's concept of that reality. It condemns any identification of language as arbitrary. It condemns any identification of concepts as abstracts without objective meaning. It condemns any assault on logic as that sole arbiter of truth.
In short, Objectivism defines and supports that which most of us already know: Reality exists, and it is not subject to the whims of thought or of society. It argues that any objection to this fundamental fact is not founded on reality, but on semantic trickery or philosophical sleight of hand that breaks down, necessarily, when studied in any detail.
Epistemological confusion arises when one considers the consequences of using logic as the sole arbiter of objective truth. Logic can only arrive at truth if it begins with truth; it can only arrive at a valid conclusion if it begins with valid premises. Where do these premises come from? They, too, must be logically supported, as conclusions with premises of their own. Logic, if defined this way, appears to be inherently circular: It results in an endless string of conclusions that must be supported by premises, which themselves must exist as conclusions which must be supported by their own premises, etc, etc.
To reduce this to a finite, conceptual, objective whole, there must be a foundation. There must be something at which this string of logic ends -- something that grounds it to reality. Other schools of thought deny this foundation, electing instead to exist in some formless, contradictory state of necessary ignorance bounded on all sides by infinite, arbitrary subjectivity. Objectivism passionately rejects this senseless state of adopted chaos.
Objectivism identifies the foundation of objective reality as three irreducable primaries: three axiomatic concepts that are as undeniable as they are unsupportable.
The Three Axiomatic Concepts of Objectivism
At the heart of Objectivist epistemology (and the root of its difference from any other school of philosophy) is the recognition of three inarguable truths; three axiomatic concepts that must be accepted, but cannot be proven. These axiomatic concepts are the only constituents of Objectivism that are accepted without the application of logic, because they are intimately self-evident from the first moment of a human's life. They are intimately linked to every aspect of that life, and are affirmed in their entirety by the very first fractional moment of awareness a baby can be said to recognize which, if words were possible at that stage, would be described as: "I am aware of something."
They are:
A) Existence: "I am aware of something." From the first moment of a baby's life, it is aware of and accepts the concept of existence. Existence exists is the first axiomatic concept; there are things that exist, and this state of existence is distinctly different from its absence. Existence subsumes and includes everything and, by everything, I of course refer to everything that exists -- the axiomatic concept cannot be proven or even phrased in any other way but circularly. Note that this axiomatic concept does not describe the nature of existence. Whether we're figments of some God's dream or hooked into some supercomputer a-la The Matrix, there is still a distinct difference between the state of 'being' and the state of 'non-being,' whatever the context. This difference is utterly inarguable and, thus, utterly objective.
B) Identity: "I am aware of something." There are things that can be distinguished from other things, and the existent that allows us to perform this differentiation is Identity. Once again, the nature of identity is irrelevant -- it is the objective fact that a thing is what it is and is not what it isn't; note, again, the necessary circular nature of the concept. This, too, is inarguable and objective. A direct correlation to this is the necessity of non-contradiction. An entity cannot both be A and be not-A, or it possesses no identity -- no existence. Definition is irrelevant to this fact: A thing cannot both have X and not have X, regardless of how you define 'X.'
C) Consciousness: "I am aware of something." The active state of awareness, through which all of existence and identity is processed, assimilated, retained and experienced, is the axiomatic concept of consciousness. Defining consciousness is impossible but through its constituent concepts: Awareness, thought, perception, emotion, etc. These do not define consciousness, they are merely listed components of consciousness; describing consciousness in such a fashion is akin to describing existence or identity by listing 'tree, leaf, stick, car, man;' you're just fortunate enough to have less constituent concepts to list.
Consequences of the Axiomatic Concepts
These three concepts share a number of characteristics:
1) They can only be defined as a tautology: A tautology, as mentioned above, is a repetitive, empty statement that says nothing. "Existence exists." "A is A." "Consciousness is conscious." Tautologies say nothing, because there is nothing to be said about these axiomatic concepts except 'They Are.' They cannot be further broken down into constituent concepts, they cannot be more intently defined, they can neither be logically supported nor objectively proven. They precede argument, thought and logic and, as such, are not subject to them.
2) They have no conceptual alternatives: A conceptual alternative is something that the original concept distinguishes itself from by means of a distinguishing characteristic. The concept 'table,' for example, serves to distinguish itself from 'chair' by means of its shape; all concepts, other than these three, distinguish themselves from other concepts in similar ways -- by first isolating a characteristic(s) that they share, then describing how the specifics of this characteristic(s) differ. This can be a hard point to grasp if you don't take a moment to consider a few examples. Envision some concepts, then define them. Every single one will be defined by distinguishing itself from related concepts. Fish are defined as being distinct from birds; fish are not defined as being distinct from 'green.' You will find that this is true of every single concept except Existence, Identity and Consciousness. In all three cases, the only alternative concept is the negation -- non-existence, non-identity, non-consciousness.
3) They are undeniable: By undeniable, I mean literally "un"-"deniable". It is fundamentally impossible, on any level, to deny them. To deny the truth of a concept, you cannot affirm that concept in doing so: If every attempt to disprove God had to begin by proving God existed, then God would be undeniable; to deny that something is a table, you cannot base your argument on the fact that it is a table. To deny that Martians exist, you cannot base your argument on the fact that they do exist. The only alternative is to employ concepts that are alternatives to the concept you are seeking to deny; and the only alternatives to the axiomatic concepts are their negations. To deny existence is to do so through non-existence; the moment you appeal to an existent (a word, a thought, a concept, an argument) in an attempt to deny existence, you have affirmed existence. To deny identity is to do so through non-identity; the moment you distinguish one concept from another, one thought from another, one point from another, you have affirmed identity. To deny consciousness is to do so through non-consciousness; the moment you apply any cognitive effort whatsoever, you have affirmed consciousness.
That is the heart of the inviolate truths of the axiomatic concepts: They are affirmed -- wholeheartedly embraced and objectively accepted -- with every attempt to deny them.
Next: The Source of Objectivist Logic
OBJECTIVIST EPISTEMOLOGY
Objectivist epistemology differs from other schools of philosophy in that it asserts that reality is real. This tautology should be meaningless, but at the heart of any objection to Objectivism is a denial of this 'empty' fact. Objectivism asserts that we are able to apprehend this objective reality: It asserts that knowledge is objective, that the analytic/synthetic dichotomy does not exist, and that logic is the one and only arbiter of objective truth.
Objectivism condemns as illogical and irrational any school of thought that introduces any chasm between reality and man's concept of that reality. It condemns any identification of language as arbitrary. It condemns any identification of concepts as abstracts without objective meaning. It condemns any assault on logic as that sole arbiter of truth.
In short, Objectivism defines and supports that which most of us already know: Reality exists, and it is not subject to the whims of thought or of society. It argues that any objection to this fundamental fact is not founded on reality, but on semantic trickery or philosophical sleight of hand that breaks down, necessarily, when studied in any detail.
Epistemological confusion arises when one considers the consequences of using logic as the sole arbiter of objective truth. Logic can only arrive at truth if it begins with truth; it can only arrive at a valid conclusion if it begins with valid premises. Where do these premises come from? They, too, must be logically supported, as conclusions with premises of their own. Logic, if defined this way, appears to be inherently circular: It results in an endless string of conclusions that must be supported by premises, which themselves must exist as conclusions which must be supported by their own premises, etc, etc.
To reduce this to a finite, conceptual, objective whole, there must be a foundation. There must be something at which this string of logic ends -- something that grounds it to reality. Other schools of thought deny this foundation, electing instead to exist in some formless, contradictory state of necessary ignorance bounded on all sides by infinite, arbitrary subjectivity. Objectivism passionately rejects this senseless state of adopted chaos.
Objectivism identifies the foundation of objective reality as three irreducable primaries: three axiomatic concepts that are as undeniable as they are unsupportable.
The Three Axiomatic Concepts of Objectivism
At the heart of Objectivist epistemology (and the root of its difference from any other school of philosophy) is the recognition of three inarguable truths; three axiomatic concepts that must be accepted, but cannot be proven. These axiomatic concepts are the only constituents of Objectivism that are accepted without the application of logic, because they are intimately self-evident from the first moment of a human's life. They are intimately linked to every aspect of that life, and are affirmed in their entirety by the very first fractional moment of awareness a baby can be said to recognize which, if words were possible at that stage, would be described as: "I am aware of something."
They are:
A) Existence: "I am aware of something." From the first moment of a baby's life, it is aware of and accepts the concept of existence. Existence exists is the first axiomatic concept; there are things that exist, and this state of existence is distinctly different from its absence. Existence subsumes and includes everything and, by everything, I of course refer to everything that exists -- the axiomatic concept cannot be proven or even phrased in any other way but circularly. Note that this axiomatic concept does not describe the nature of existence. Whether we're figments of some God's dream or hooked into some supercomputer a-la The Matrix, there is still a distinct difference between the state of 'being' and the state of 'non-being,' whatever the context. This difference is utterly inarguable and, thus, utterly objective.
B) Identity: "I am aware of something." There are things that can be distinguished from other things, and the existent that allows us to perform this differentiation is Identity. Once again, the nature of identity is irrelevant -- it is the objective fact that a thing is what it is and is not what it isn't; note, again, the necessary circular nature of the concept. This, too, is inarguable and objective. A direct correlation to this is the necessity of non-contradiction. An entity cannot both be A and be not-A, or it possesses no identity -- no existence. Definition is irrelevant to this fact: A thing cannot both have X and not have X, regardless of how you define 'X.'
C) Consciousness: "I am aware of something." The active state of awareness, through which all of existence and identity is processed, assimilated, retained and experienced, is the axiomatic concept of consciousness. Defining consciousness is impossible but through its constituent concepts: Awareness, thought, perception, emotion, etc. These do not define consciousness, they are merely listed components of consciousness; describing consciousness in such a fashion is akin to describing existence or identity by listing 'tree, leaf, stick, car, man;' you're just fortunate enough to have less constituent concepts to list.
Consequences of the Axiomatic Concepts
These three concepts share a number of characteristics:
1) They can only be defined as a tautology: A tautology, as mentioned above, is a repetitive, empty statement that says nothing. "Existence exists." "A is A." "Consciousness is conscious." Tautologies say nothing, because there is nothing to be said about these axiomatic concepts except 'They Are.' They cannot be further broken down into constituent concepts, they cannot be more intently defined, they can neither be logically supported nor objectively proven. They precede argument, thought and logic and, as such, are not subject to them.
2) They have no conceptual alternatives: A conceptual alternative is something that the original concept distinguishes itself from by means of a distinguishing characteristic. The concept 'table,' for example, serves to distinguish itself from 'chair' by means of its shape; all concepts, other than these three, distinguish themselves from other concepts in similar ways -- by first isolating a characteristic(s) that they share, then describing how the specifics of this characteristic(s) differ. This can be a hard point to grasp if you don't take a moment to consider a few examples. Envision some concepts, then define them. Every single one will be defined by distinguishing itself from related concepts. Fish are defined as being distinct from birds; fish are not defined as being distinct from 'green.' You will find that this is true of every single concept except Existence, Identity and Consciousness. In all three cases, the only alternative concept is the negation -- non-existence, non-identity, non-consciousness.
3) They are undeniable: By undeniable, I mean literally "un"-"deniable". It is fundamentally impossible, on any level, to deny them. To deny the truth of a concept, you cannot affirm that concept in doing so: If every attempt to disprove God had to begin by proving God existed, then God would be undeniable; to deny that something is a table, you cannot base your argument on the fact that it is a table. To deny that Martians exist, you cannot base your argument on the fact that they do exist. The only alternative is to employ concepts that are alternatives to the concept you are seeking to deny; and the only alternatives to the axiomatic concepts are their negations. To deny existence is to do so through non-existence; the moment you appeal to an existent (a word, a thought, a concept, an argument) in an attempt to deny existence, you have affirmed existence. To deny identity is to do so through non-identity; the moment you distinguish one concept from another, one thought from another, one point from another, you have affirmed identity. To deny consciousness is to do so through non-consciousness; the moment you apply any cognitive effort whatsoever, you have affirmed consciousness.
That is the heart of the inviolate truths of the axiomatic concepts: They are affirmed -- wholeheartedly embraced and objectively accepted -- with every attempt to deny them.
Next: The Source of Objectivist Logic