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+\chapter{Philosophical Aspects of Walking Through Walls}
+
+
+We read that in the Middle Ages, people found it impossible not to
+believe that they would be struck by lightning if they uttered a blasphemy.
+Yet I utterly disbelieve that I will be struck by lightning if I utter a
+blasphemy. Beliefs such as the one at issue here will be called fearful beliefs.
+Elsewhere, I have argued that all beliefs are self-deceiving. I have also
+observed that there are often non-cognitive motives for holding beliefs, so
+that a technical, analytical demonstration that a belief is self-deceiving will
+not necessarily provide a sufficient motive for renouncing it. The question
+then arises as to why people would hold fearful beliefs. It would seem that
+people would readily repudiate beliefs such as the one about blasphemy as
+soon as there was any reason to doubt them, even if the reason was abstract
+and technical. Yet fearful beliefs are held more tenaciously than any others.
+Further, when philosophers seek examples of beliefs which one cannot
+afford to give up, beliefs which are not mere social conventions, beliefs
+which are truly objective, they invariably choose fearful beliefs.
+
+Fearful beliefs raise some subtle questions about the character of beliefs
+as mental acts. If I contemplate blasphemy, experience a strong fear, and
+decide not to blaspheme, do I stand convicted of believing that I will be
+punished if I blaspheme, or may I claim that I was following an emotional
+preference which did not involve any belief? Is there a distinction between
+fearful avoidance and fearful belief? Can the emotion of fear be
+self-deceiving in and of itself? Must a belief have a verbal, propositional
+formulation, or is it possible to have a belief with no linguistic representation
+whatever?
+
+It is apparent that fearful beliefs suggest many topics for speculation.
+This essay, however, will concentrate exclusively on one topic, which is by
+far the most important. Given that people once held the belief about
+blasphemy, and that I do not, then I have succeeded in dispensing with a
+fearful belief. Two beliefs which are exactly analogous to the one about
+blasphemy are the belief that if I jump out of a tenth story window I will be
+hurt, and the belief that if I attempt to walk through a wall I will bruise
+myself. Given that I am able to dispense with the belief about blasphemy, it
+follows that, in effect, I am able to walk through walls relative to medieval
+people. That is, my ability to blaspheme without being struck by lightning
+would be as unimaginable to them as the ability to walk through walls is
+today. The topic of this essay is whether it is possible to transfer my
+achievement concerning blasphemy to other fearful beliefs.
+
+\visbreak
+
+I am told that \enquote{if you jump out of a tenth story window you really will
+be hurt.} Yet the analogous exhortation concerning blasphemy is not
+convincing or compelling at all. Why not? I suggest that the nature of the
+"evidence" implied in the exhortation should be examined very closely to
+see if it does not represent an epistemological swindle. In the cases of both
+blasphemy and jumping out of the window, I am told that if I perform the
+action I will suffer injury. But do I concede that I have to blaspheme, in
+order to prove that I can get away with it? Actually, I do not blaspheme; I
+simply do not perform the action at all. Yet I do not have any belief
+whatever that it would be dangerous to do so. Why should anyone suppose
+that because I do not believe something, I have to run out in the street,
+shake my fist at the sky, and curse God in order to validate may disbelief?
+Why should the credulous person be able to put me in in the position of
+having to accept the dare that "you have to do it to prove you don't believe
+it's dangerous"? Could it not be that this dare is some sort of a swindle?
+The structure of the evidence for the supposedly unrelinquishable belief
+should be examined very closely to see if it is not so much legerdemain.
+
+The exhortation continues to the effect that if I did utter blasphemy I
+really would be struck by lightning. I still do not find this compelling. But
+suppose that I do see someone utter a blasphemy and get struck by lightning.
+Surely this must convert me. But with due apologies to the faithful, I must
+report that it does not. There is no reason why it should make me believe. I
+do not believe that blaspheming will cause me to be struck by lightning, and
+the evocation of frightful images---or for that matter, something that I
+see---would provide no reason whatever for sudden credulity. There is an
+immense difference between seeing a person blaspheme and get struck by
+lightning, and believing that if one blasphemes, one will get struck by
+lightning. This difference should be quite apparent to one who does not hold
+the belief.\footnote{In more conventional terms, the civilization in which I tive is so
+profoundly secular that its secularism cannot be demolished by one
+"sighting."}
+
+In general, the so-called evidence doesn't work. There is a swindle
+somewhere in the evidence that is supposed to make me accept the fearful
+belief. Upon close scrutiny, each bit of evidence misses the target. Yet the
+whole conglomeration of "evidence" somehow overwhelmed medieval
+people. They had to believe something that I do not believe. I can get away
+with something that they could not get away with.
+
+It is not that I stand up in a society of the faithful and suddenly
+blaspheme. It is rather that the whole medieval cognitive orientation had
+been completely reoriented by the time it was transmitted to me. Or in other
+words, the medieval cognitive orientation was restructured throughout
+during the modern era. In the process, the compelling conglomeration of
+evidence was disintegrated. Isolated from their niches in the old orientation,
+the bits of evidence no longer worked. Each bit missed the target. I do not
+have a head-on confrontation with the medieval impossibility of
+blaspheming. I slip by the impossibility, where they could not, because I
+structure the entire situation, and the evidence, differently.
+
+The analysis just presented, combined with analyses of beliefs which I
+have made elsewhere, assures me that the belief that "if I try to walk
+through the wall I will fail and will bruise myself" is also discardable. I am
+sure that I can walk through walls just as successfully as I can blaspheme.
+But to do so will not be trivial. As I have shown, escaping the power of a
+fearful belief is not a matter of head-on confrontation, but of restructuring
+the entire situation, of restructuring evidence, so that the conglomeration of
+evidence is disintegrated into isolated bits which are separately powerless.
+Only then can one slip by the impossibility. I cannot exercise my freedom to
+walk through walls until the whole cognitive orientation of the modern era is
+restructured throughout.
+
+The project of restructuring the modern cognitive orientation is a vast
+one. The natural sciences must certainly be dismantled. In this connection it
+is appropriate to make a criticism about the logic of science as Carnap
+rationalized it. Carnap considered a proposition meaningful if it had any
+empirically verifiable proposition as an implication. But consider an
+appropriate ensemble of scientific propositions in good standing, and
+conceive of it as a conjunction of an infinite number of propositions about
+single events (what Carnap called protocol-sentences). Only a very small
+number of the latter propositions are indeed subject to verification. If we
+sever them from the entire conjunction, what remains is as effectively
+blocked from verification as the propositions which Carnap rejected as
+meaningless. This criticism of science is not a mere technical exercise. A
+scientific proposition is a fabrication which amalgamates a few trivially
+testable meanings with an infinite number of untestable meanings and
+inveigles us to accept the whole conglomeration at once. It is apparent at the
+very beginning of \booktitle{Philosophy and Logical Syntax} that Carnap recognized this
+quite clearly; but it did not occur to him to do anything about it. For us,
+however, it is essential to be assured that science can be dismantled just as
+the proof can be dismantled that I will be struck by lightning if I blaspheme.
+
+We can suggest some other approaches which may contribute to
+overcoming the modern cognitive orientation. The habitual correlation of
+the realm of sight and the realm of touch which occurs when we perceive
+"objects" is a likely candidate for dismantling.\footnote{The psychological jargon for
+this correlation is "the contribution of intermodal organization to the
+object Gestalt."}
+
+From a different traditon, the critique of scientific fact and of
+measurable time which is suggested in Luk\'{a}cs' \booktitle{Reification and the
+Consciousness of the Proletariat} might be of value if it were developed.\footnote{Lulkacs also implied that scientific truth would disappear in a communist
+society---that is, a society without necessary labor, in which the right to
+subsistence was unconditional. He implied that scientific quantification and
+facticity are closely connected with the work discipline required by the
+capitalist mode of production; and that like the price system, they constitute
+a false objectivity which we accept because the social economic institutions
+deprive us of subsistence if we fail to submit to them. Quite aside from the
+historical unlikelihood of a communist society, this suggestion might be
+pursued as a thought experiment to obtain a more detailed characterization
+of the hypothetical post-scientific outlook.}
+
+Finally, I may mention that most of my own writings are offered as
+fragmentary beginnings in the project of dismantling the modern cognitive
+orientation.
+
+Someday we will realize that we were always free to walk through
+walls. But we could not exercise this freedom because we structured the
+whole situation, and the evidence, in an enslaving way.
+