2022
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/k4zq2
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Differences between Common Types of Thought Experiments and their Consequences for Philosophical Methodology

Abstract: It is a common assumption that philosophical thought experiments are structurally identical. Contrary to this assumption, I show that at least two types of thought experiments exist. Descartes’s “piece of wax” and Nagel’s “what is it like to be a bat” thought experiments, for instance, are performative proofs that consist in exercising the imagination to justify a claim about the imagination. Searle’s “Chinese room” and Davidson’s “swampman” thought experiments, for example, evaluate theories by comparing whet… Show more

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