Thomas Raleigh’s research while affiliated with University of Luxembourg and other places

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Publications (21)


The Emptiness of Naturalism: Joint Winner of the Philosophy Essay Prize Competition 2023
  • Article

March 2025

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1 Read

Philosophy

Thomas Raleigh

I argue that the term ‘naturalism’ is so empty of meaning that it is not suitable for serious theorizing in philosophy. In particular, I argue that the question of whether or not some theory or thesis should count as naturalistic is an empty verbal dispute with no further theoretical significance. I also discuss naturalism construed as a methodological thesis and argue that any plausible version will collapse into triviality. Lastly, I briefly discuss the idea that naturalism is not a thesis at all but rather a ‘stance’ and suggest that this too succumbs to the charge of emptiness. I conclude that we should stop talking about naturalism altogether.


What can We Know about Unanswerable Questions?

November 2023

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1 Read

The Philosophical Quarterly

I present two arguments that aim to establish logical limits on what we can know. More specifically, I argue for two results concerning what we can know about questions that we cannot answer. I also discuss a line of thought, found in the writings of Pierce and of Rescher, in support of the idea that we cannot identify specific scientific questions that will never be answered.


The argument from small improvement is a red herring

June 2023

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13 Reads


Familiar properties and phenomenal properties

November 2022

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14 Reads

Analytic Philosophy

Sometimes when we describe our own sensory experiences, we seem to attribute to experience itself the same sorts of familiar properties—such as shape or colour—as we attribute to everyday physical objects. But how literally should we understand such descriptions? Can there really be phenomenal elements or aspects to an experience which are, for example quite literally square? This paper examines how these questions connect to a wide range of different commitments and theories about the metaphysics of mind. In particular, I consider whether there may be phenomenological reasons to accept or reject the idea that there are elements or aspects of conscious experience itself which instantiate familiar spatial properties. I also explore how some general theses about the nature of empirical properties can motivate different answers to these questions.



A new anti-expertise dilemma
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

December 2021

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32 Reads

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1 Citation

Synthese

Instability occurs when the very fact of choosing one particular possible option rather than another affects the expected values of those possible options. In decision theory: An act is stable iff given that it is actually performed, its expected utility is maximal. When there is no stable choice available, the resulting instability can seem to pose a dilemma of practical rationality. A structurally very similar kind of instability, which occurs in cases of anti-expertise, can likewise seem to create dilemmas of epistemic rationality. One possible line of response to such cases of instability, suggested by both Jeffrey (The logic of decision, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1983) and Sorensen (Aust J Philos 65(3):301–315, 1987), is to insist that a rational agent can simply refuse to accept that such instability applies to herself in the first place. According to this line of thought it can be rational for a subject to discount even very strong empirical evidence that the anti-expertise condition obtains. I present a new variety of anti-expertise condition where no particular empirical stage-setting is required, since the subject can deduce a priori that an anti-expertise condition obtains. This kind of anti-expertise case is therefore not amenable to the line of response that Jeffrey and Sorensen recommend.

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Visual acquaintance, action and the explanatory gap

July 2021

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82 Reads

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2 Citations

Synthese

Much attention has recently been paid to the idea, which I label ‘External World Acquaintance’ (EWA), that the phenomenal character of perceptual experience is partially constituted by external features. One motivation for EWA which has received relatively little discussion is its alleged ability to help deal with the ‘Explanatory Gap’. I provide a reformulation of this general line of thought, which makes clearer how and when EWA could help to explain the specific phenomenal nature of visual experience. In particular, I argue that by focusing on the different kinds of perceptual actions that are available in the case of visual spatial vs. colour perception, we get a natural explanation for why we should expect the specific nature of colour phenomenology to remain less readily intelligible than the specific nature of visual spatial phenomenology.


Suspending is believing

March 2021

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101 Reads

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37 Citations

Synthese

A good account of the agnostic attitude of Suspending Judgement should explain how it can be rendered more or less rational/justified according to the state of one’s evidence—and one’s relation to that evidence. I argue that the attitude of suspending judgement whether p constitutively involves having a belief; roughly, a belief that one cannot yet tell whether or not p. I show that a theory of suspending that treats it as a sui generis attitude, wholly distinct from belief, struggles to account for how suspension of judgement can be rendered more or less rational (or irrational) by one’s evidence. I also criticise the related idea that suspension essentially requires an ‘Inquiring Attitude’. I show how a belief-based theory, in contrast, neatly accounts for the rational and epistemic features of suspending and so neatly accounts for why an agnostic has a genuine neutral opinion concerning the question whether p, as opposed to simply having no opinion.


Science, substance and spatial appearances

August 2020

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16 Reads

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2 Citations

Philosophical Studies

According to a certain kind of naïve or folk understanding of physical matter, everyday ‘solid’ objects are composed of a homogeneous, gap-less substance, with sharply defined boundaries, which wholly fills the space they occupy. A further claim is that our perceptual experience of the environment represents or indicates that the objects around us conform to this sort of conception of physical matter. Were this further claim correct, it would mean that the way that the world appears to us in experience conflicts with the deliverances of our best current scientific theories in the following respect: perceptual experience would be intrinsically misleading concerning the structure of physical matter. I argue against this further claim. Experience in itself is not committed to, nor does it provide evidence for, any such conception of the nature of physical matter. The naïve/folk conception of matter in question cannot simply be ‘read-off’ from perceptual appearances.


Perceptual Experience and Degrees of Belief

June 2020

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14 Reads

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7 Citations

The Philosophical Quarterly

According to the recent Perceptual Confidence view, perceptual experiences possess not only a representational content, but also a degree of confidence in that content. The motivations for this view are partly phenomenological and partly epistemic. We discuss both the phenomenological and epistemic motivations for the view, and the resulting account of the interface between perceptual experiences and degrees of belief. We conclude that, in their present state of development, orthodox accounts of perceptual experience are still to be favoured over the perceptual confidence view.


Citations (12)


... ' (p226) and denies that there can be genuine rational/epistemic dilemmas. For what it is worth, I have myself argued against representational accounts of perceptual consciousness (Raleigh, 2015), against Uniqueness (Raleigh, 2017) and proposed a putative rational dilemma (Raleigh, 2021). But I suspect it would be boring and unproductive to focus on these disagreements. ...

Reference:

Comments on Smithies
A new anti-expertise dilemma

Synthese

... 'About fifty' has several clear cases, including forty-nine and fifty-one, whereas your experience might represent a vague range with only one clear case, fifty.) A vague range might also defuse the second worry, explaining why you should have credences in the 41 Beck and Languedoc also critically assess two other responses to the second worry, due to Nanay (2020) and Raleigh and Vindrola (2021). For an alternative to Morrison's view about what is involved in trusting one's experience, see Beck (2019). ...

Perceptual Experience and Degrees of Belief
  • Citing Article
  • June 2020

The Philosophical Quarterly

... At its core, the view consists of two related theses: a metaphysical thesis that perception essentially involves a form of awareness of objects that is especially direct and not mediated by awareness of facts or anything else; and an epistemic thesis that this direct form of awareness grounds a species of knowledge of objects that is non-propositional, so that the only way to know an object in the relevant sense is to perceive it directly. 9 The resulting account contrasts sharply with what is perhaps the 8 See discussion in Raleigh (2019) and Duncan (2021). 9 Coleman (2019, p59) writes: ...

Introduction: The Recent Renaissance of AcquaintanceThe Recent Renaissance of Acquaintance
  • Citing Chapter
  • November 2019

... For example, Sean Crawford argues that: "Suspension of judgement necessarily involves thoughts about one's own epistemic perspective on whether or not p, namely, that one's epistemic perspective falls short of establishing whether p and thus that one does not know whether p" (Crawford, 2004, p. 226). The belief-based view of suspension is further articulated by Raleigh (2021), and Masny (2020, p. 5024): "S suspends judgment about p iff (i) S believes that she neither believes nor disbelieves that p, (ii) S neither believes nor disbelieves that p, (iii) S intends to judge that p or not-p." Without delving into the details of these accounts, it's noteworthy that recent explanations of suspension closely resemble older accounts of doubt, providing additional support for the plausibility of the NO-DIFFERENCE view. ...

Suspending is believing

Synthese

... Relationalist accounts of perceptual consciousness (Campbell 2002;Martin 2002;Fish 2009;Logue 2012b;Raleigh 2021) identify phenomenal properties of conscious perceptual experiences with mind-independent properties of the situations and objects that we perceive. As J. L. Austin puts it, the way things look is, in general, just as much a fact about the world, just as open to public confirmation or challenge, as the way things are. ...

Visual acquaintance, action and the explanatory gap

Synthese

... These debates hinge on whether we ought to interpret the brain as a computational system that operates over mental representations, or instead as a complex embodied and embedded dynamical system whose behaviour is best explained via the application of particular kinds of mathematical formalisms (with Dynamical Systems Theory being one that is frequently proposed). For additional details on this debate, see: Chemero (2009);Eliasmith (1996); Hutto and Myin (2014); Raleigh (2018); Taylor (2022);Van Gelder (1995); Van Gelder and Port (1995). ...

Tolerant enactivist cognitive science
  • Citing Article
  • May 2018

Philosophical Explorations

... Neither view on higher-order defeat would create the supposed challenge to RKOG. 19 Additional phenomena which are recurrently put forward against evidentialism and, by extension, against RKOG are self-defeating and self-fulfilling beliefs (Sharadin, 2016a;Raleigh, 2017;Antill, 2019;Silva & Tal, 2021). These attitudes are supposed to instantiate, respectively, instances of OGRs in favour of belief which are not RKRs and RKRs in favour of belief which are not OGRs. ...

Another Argument Against Uniqueness
  • Citing Article
  • September 2016

The Philosophical Quarterly

... White (2005White ( , 2014 also argued for interpersonal uniqueness, but many authors suggested that his arguments support only intrapersonal uniqueness (see Kopec and Titelbaum (2016) on this specific issue). 2 See Drake (2016), Douven (2009), Titelbaum and Kopec (forthcoming, m.s.), Kopec (2015) and Raleigh (2015). Brueckner and Bundy (2012) reject White's argument for uniqueness, but they do not endorse a specific view concerning permissiveness.A quick clarificatory remark: it is close to trivial that intrapersonal permissiveness implies its interpersonal counterpart. ...

An Argument for Permissivism from Safespots
  • Citing Conference Paper
  • November 2015

Lecture Notes in Computer Science

... Naïve realism can be motivated by theoretical considerations about cognitive and epistemic roles of the phenomenology of veridical perceptual experience. 2 For example, it has been argued that only naïve realism can provide a plausible account as to how a veridical perceptual experience enables us to form a demonstrative thought about an environmental object (Campbell, 2002;Raleigh, 2011). It has also been argued that naïve realism can provide the best account as to how a veridical perceptual experience enables us to gain knowledge about the external world (Johnston 2006(Johnston , 2011Logue 2012a). ...

Visual Experience and Demonstrative Thought

Disputatio

... The fact that some have argued that naïve realism can be upheld without committing to disjunctivism reflects the fact that not everyone agrees on what naïve realism entails, due to the ambiguity affecting the formulation of both CC and RC. Other strategies to defend a non-disjunctive versions of naïve realism rely on arguing that objects (although non-standard) are also constituents of the phenomenal character of hallucination(Raleigh 2014, Ali 2018.Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved. ...

A New Approach to 'Perfect' Hallucinations
  • Citing Article
  • November 2014

Journal of Consciousness Studies