Here is a hand (or "aw come on") is the name of a philosophical argument created by George Edward Moore against Philosophical skepticism and in support of common sense. The argument has become famous among philosophers.
The Skeptical Argument
Moore's response is as follows:
Moore does not attack the skeptical argument, instead, he boldly claims that it is wrong, because its conclusion is unintuitive.
Moore's argument is not simply a flippant response to the skeptic. Moore gives in "Proof of an External World", three requirements for a good proof. (1) the premises must be different from the conclusion, (2) the premises must be demonstrated, and (3) the conclusion must follow from the premises. He claims that his proof of an external world meets those three criteria.
In his 1925 essay "A Defence of Common Sense" he argued against idealism and skepticism toward the external world on the grounds that they could not give reasons to accept their metaphysical premises that were more plausible than the reasons we have to accept the common sense claims about our knowledge of the world that skeptics and idealists must deny. In other words, he is more willing to believe that he has a hand than believe the premises of a strange argument in a University classroom. "I do not think it is rational to be as certain of any one of these ... propositions".
Not surprisingly, not everyone inclined to skeptical doubts found Moore's method of argument entirely convincing; Moore, however, defends his argument on the (surprisingly simple) grounds that skeptical arguments seem invariably to require an appeal to "philosophical intuitions" that we have considerably less reason to accept than we have for the common sense claims that they supposedly refute.
Moore's argument flips the Modus Ponens structure into a Modus Tollens: If A then B. Not B. Therefore not A.
"one man's modus ponens is another man's modus tollens" (Dretske 1995 *).
The "here is one hand" idea, in addition to fueling Moore's own work, also deeply influenced Wittgenstein, who spent his last weeks working out a new approach to Moore's argument in the remarks that were published posthumously as On Certainty.
Although perhaps not a supplement to Moore's argument, it has been mentioned in undergraduate philosophy classes that Moore famously mistook his own sense perception once in a lecture. Whereby he claimed "there is a window" pointing at a curtain in a gymnasium, but when a student pulled the curtain away it was merely a wall. Whether this is a philosophical urban legend or not, there is little doubt that optical illusions and hallucinations can cause unreliable sense perceptions.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Here is a hand".
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