Aufsatz(elektronisch)5. Januar 2021

Is absence of evidence of pain ever evidence of absence?

In: Synthese: an international journal for epistemology, methodology and philosophy of science, Band 199, Heft 1-2, S. 3881-3902

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Abstract

AbstractAbsence of evidence arguments are indispensable to comparative neurobiology. The absence in a given species of a homologous neural architecture strongly correlated with a type of conscious experience in humans should be able to be taken as a prima facie reason for concluding that the species in question does not have the capacity for that conscious experience. Absence of evidence reasoning is, however, widely disparaged for being both logically illicit and unscientific. This paper argues that these concerns are unwarranted. There is no logical barrier to formulating cogent absence of evidence arguments; indeed, accepting such arguments is part of what it is to be committed to falsifiability as a critical aspect of the scientific method. Absence of evidence arguments can always be blocked, however, by assuming that psychological properties are 'multiply realizable'. While we take multiple realizability to be highly likely at some level of analysis, we argue that it is question-begging to assume that it exists at every level of analysis, and thus it should not automatically be thought to undermine absence of evidence reasoning in the animal consciousness debate. Using the example of pain and focusing on homologies at the level of information processing tasks, we show how, in the science of consciousness, an absence of evidence might well serve as evidence of absence.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

ISSN: 1573-0964

DOI

10.1007/s11229-020-02961-0

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