Abstract

Philosophers are often credited with particularly well-developed conceptual skills. The ‘expertise objection’ to experimental philosophy builds on this assumption to challenge inferences from findings about laypeople to conclusions about philosophers. We draw on psycholinguistics to develop and assess this objection. We examine whether philosophers are less or differently susceptible than laypersons to cognitive biases that affect how people understand verbal case descriptions and judge the cases described. We examine two possible sources of difference: Philosophers could be better at deploying concepts, and this could make them less susceptible to comprehension biases (‘linguistic expertise objection’). Alternatively, exposure to different patterns of linguistic usage could render philosophers vulnerable to a fundamental comprehension bias, the linguistic salience bias, at different points (‘linguistic usage objection’). Together, these objections mount a novel ‘master argument’ against experimental philosophy. To develop and empirically assess this argument, we employ corpus analysis and distributional semantic analysis and elicit plausibility ratings from academic philosophers and psychology undergraduates. Our findings suggest philosophers are better at deploying concepts than laypeople but are susceptible to the linguistic salience bias to a similar extent and at similar points. We identify methodological consequences for experimental philosophy and for philosophical thought experiments.

Highlights

  • This paper will redevelop and assess the ‘expertise objection’ to experimental philosophy, by drawing on methods and findings from psycholinguistics

  • We examined the use of the verbs ‘see’ and ‘be aware of’ in samples of at least 1000 sentences randomly drawn from three corpora roughly representative of ordinary discourse, academic philosophy, and a specific sub-area, respectively: (1) the British National Corpus (BNC), (2) a topically generic philosophy corpus compiled from two philosophy encyclopedias (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and International Encyclopedia of Philosophy) (SEP/IEP), and (3) a philosophy of perception corpus (PHILO-P) comprised of ten monographs that shaped philosophical debates about sense-data, naïve and direct realism, and the resulting ‘problem of perception’

  • Results bore out predictions from the linguistic salience bias hypothesis SBH and from H1, but not from H2 and H3

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Summary

Introduction

This paper will redevelop and assess the ‘expertise objection’ to experimental philosophy, by drawing on methods and findings from psycholinguistics. Experimental philosophy focuses on the empirical investigation of philosophically relevant intuitions. According to the expertise objection, experimental philosophers go wrong already at the first step of their empirical studies: they recruit the wrong participants.. Experimental philosophers typically recruit convenience samples without philosophical training: M-Turkers, psychology undergraduates, etc. Philosophical training and expertise improve thinkers’ conceptual competencies and, thereby, their intuitive case judgments. Findings about the intuitions of ‘laypeople’ are irrelevant for philosophical research

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