The assignment was to write a 500-word (no more!) précis of the first chapter of A.E. Taylor’s Elements Of Metaphysics. Being a somewhat long-winded gentleman, I found this to be challenging.
Metaphysics is a difficult discipline. Its subject matter touches very general and simple issues, impinging on all our intellectual pursuits, yet benefiting from nothing like a well-established consensus or authoritative laboratory experiments.
Some deny the possibility or propriety of metaphysics. All such denials are self-contradictory, always making metaphysical claims in the process of denying that such claims can be made. Further, if one would hold the problems of metaphysics to be intractable, one would be committed forever to the disheartening inseparability of appearance from reality.
Metaphysics attempts to rescue appearances from the scourge of contradiction, replacing troublesome cases with a coherent and non-contradictory view of reality. When we think validly (or “logically”), we attempt to think about what is true or real; hence the law of non-contradiction is no mere logical law, but a fundamental metaphysical principle as well.
Metaphysics thus separates reality from our experience of it, but it is the latter which still forms the discipline’s raw material. Taylor describes experience as “immediate psychical fact” (p. 23). It is concerned with the direct perception of real objects, or objects which can actually have some direct connection “the psychical life of a sentient subject” (p. 24). Thus “real” objects are those which actually have this connection or would have it if all conditions of perception (except the presence of the perceiver) were actually to obtain.
Reality cannot be a succession of states of consciousness, since a state of consciousness requires a subject to be having it, which subject would not itself a be state of consciousness. Similarly, contra Hume, reality cannot be a “series of impressions and ideas connected by psychological laws of succession,” (p. 29), as these facts and laws would constitute part of reality, but would not themselves be impressions or ideas.
Experience is immediate, being incorrigibly distinct in the moment from the memory of an experience or later reflection on past experience. Experience is composite, having both the fact of its immediate existence (the that) and the content of the experience itself (the what). Only the perfect, or “pure” experience of all things and all their implications in one perfect experiential instant would fully suffice us our metaphysical purposes, but this kind of experience is inaccessible to us. Hence to best inform our fallible metaphysical investigations, we must identify the characteristics of this “pure” experience and understand how our actual experience differs from it.
Metaphysical method must be analytical, analyzing experience with an eye toward discovering its broader implications. It must be critical, seeking to criticize previous thoughts in light of current discoveries. It must be non-empirical, refusing to accept facts or observations without analysis. Finally, it must be non-inductive, being independent of confirmation from outside our data.
Taylor’s description of the discipline of metaphysics is helpful, and his rebuttal of the denials of metaphysics is outstanding. His description of “real” objects seems trustworthy, but is not entirely satisfactory. Without having any flaws obvious to this reader, it seems vulnerable to attack by the astute critic.