Chapter 6 –
The First Attack on
Bayesianism and How It Can Be Answered
The
idea behind Bayesianism is straightforward enough to be grasped by nearly all
adults in any land. But the idea of radical Bayesianism escapes us. The radical
form of Bayesianism says all we do, mentally, fits inside the Bayesian model. But
it is very human to dread such a view of ourselves and to slip into thinking that
radical Bayesianism must be wrong. We want desperately to believe that at least a
few of our core ideas are unshakeable. Too often, unfortunately, people think
they have found one. But to a true Bayesian, the one truth that he believes is probably
absolute is the one that says there are no absolute truths.
An
idea is a mental tool that enables you to sort and respond to sensory
experiences—single ones or whole categories of them. When you find an idea that
enables quick, accurate sorting, you keep it. What can confuse and confound
this whole picture is the way that, in the case of some of your most deeply
held, deeply programmed, ideas, you didn’t personally find them. They came in a
trial-and-error way to some of your ancestors, who found the ideas so useful that
they then did their best to program these ideas into their children, and thus
they were passed down the generations to your parents and then to you.
Every
idea you acquire is installed as part of your mental equipment, after careful
Bayesian calculations, either by the process of your own noticing, considering,
and testing it, or by your family and your tribe programming you with the idea
because the tribe’s early leaders acquired this idea by the first process.
Consciousness and even sanity are constantly evolving for all humans, all the
time. We keep rewriting our concept sets, from complex ideas like justice and love to basic ideas like up
and down and even to what I mean by I. (Individual minds can indeed be made
to reprogram their notions of up and down.1) Your barest you is a dynamic, self-referencing
system that is constantly checking its sense perceptions against its models/ideas
about what reality should be and then updating and rewriting itself.
A
short side note is in order here. A few commonly used, species-wide ideas, or
proto-ideas, are not acquired by either of the above methods because these
ideas are hardwired into us at birth. These are not programmed into humans by our
tribe nor by our own life experiences so they don’t fit into either of the
categories just described. But they do fit inside the modern empiricist view of
what knowledge is simply because in that view, with the models it has gained
from the biological sciences, especially genetics, these built-in ideas are
seen as genetically-acquired anatomical traits and thus as subjects for study
by geneticists or neurophysiologists. In short, scientists can go looking for
them directly in the human brain, and they do.
For
example, some basic ideas of language are built into all normal humans, but the
genes that cause the fetus to build the language centres into its developing
brain are still being identified. In addition, the structures and functions of
these brain areas, once they’re built, are only poorly understood. In our
present discussion, however, these issues can be passed by. They are biological
rather than philosophical in nature and thus outside our present scope. These
genes and the brain structures that are built from the gene-coded information
might someday be manipulated, either by behaviour modification, genetic
engineering, surgery, drugs, or other technologies we cannot now imagine.
But
whether such actions will be judged right or wrong and whether they will be
permitted in the normal institutions of our society will depend on our moral
values. These, as we have already seen, are going to need something more at
their core than what is offered by empiricism. Empiricism, as its own moral
guide, has proved neither sound in theory nor effective in practice. The
evidence of human history strongly suggests that science, at least so far, has
failed at being its own moral guide. This line of thought returns us to our philosophical
discussion of moralities and their sources—and so back to Bayesianism.
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