What is skepticism's place? It was fashionable for a while to dismiss it as confused: this fashion arose from Austin's philosophy. That approach is not so popular now. But is the current state of affairs any fairer to the skeptic?
``[this approach takes skepticism seriously] only to the extent of weighing it in the scales of theoretical plausibility, fully on a par with a series of alleged competitors. And, on that assessment, not surprisingly, philosophical skepticism is felt to be even less worthy of consideration than, say, Ptolemaic astronomy or the account of creation in the book of Genesis." [Review of Unger, 246-247]
But what could the alternative be? A reviewer of Stroud's The Significance of Philosophical Skepticism writes that ``Stroud rejects the claim that skeptical doubts are scientific and that we are free to use science to meet them" [Squires, 559].
In his review of Unger's Ignorance, Stroud argues that the way to go is NOT to do what Unger does, and take the bait of the liberal idea. For then one must argue that, as a theory on all fours with other theories, skepticism is actually plausible. Unger's way of doing that is by a simple, ``if it walks like a duck..." strategy.
``And then, I thought, of all the reasons skepticism might be impossible to refute, one stands out as the simplest: it isn't wrong, it's right. The reason why skeptical arguments are so compelling, always able to rise again to demand our thought, would then be a simple one: These arguments, unlike attempts to refute them, served the truth." [Unger, 2]
Stroud finds this epiphany unconvincing; to him, the strategy behind it is misguided. But this isn't to say that there isn't something to the ``duck" strategy. A comparison is with a debate over whether someone knows something. In the absence of a widely-agreed upon theory of knowledge, it is impossible to sketch a story in which our storytelling non-question-beggingly ensures (by exploiting a sufficient condition on knowledge) that S knows p. But if we were to say, for example, that S believes p, that p is true, that S's belief is safe, that it is secure, that S's belief is inferentially justified by other of his beliefs, that all of S's supporting beliefs are based on expert testimony, etc...there comes a point at which an interlocutor who maintains that S doesn't know that p is in an unattractive position. If it looks, smells, etc. like knowledge, then, protestations aside, it probably is knowledge. What strikes me as bizarre about Eklund's way with ontic vagueness is that it is the equivalent of granting that S has a JTB that p, but arguing that, since JTB isn't always K, we shouldn't conclude that S knows p. But even if JTB doesn't cut ice as a reductive account of knowledge, it is good evidence of knowledge.
I want to use something like the duck strategy in discussing ontic vagueness. The position is like skepticism in that it is questionable whether it is really ``on all fours" with other accounts of vagueness (\knowledge).
Williamson comments on the ``if it walks like a duck" line of thought with regard to ``vagueness in things":
The idea of vagueness in things has attracted some and repelled others. The idea attracts, because it promises to allow a rather direct relation between our vague ordinary words and the facts we use them to describe...The idea repels, because it promises to forbid a complete description of all the facts in precise scientific words. Opposed metaphysical proclivities underlie the ensuing debate. [qtd. Hyde, 297]
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