In a recent piece for the New York Times, Justin E. H. Smith discusses the many ways in which various figures throughout the history of philosophy have exhibited a broad curiousity about empirical questions. He then concludes:
The new “experimental philosophy” movement is... returning to an earlier conception of the inseparability of philosophical reflection and scientific inquiry, though curiously “x-phi” advocates describe themselves as breaking with “traditional” philosophy, rather than as returning to it, which is what in fact they are doing.
In my view, what Smith says here is precisely right. Experimental philosophy should never have been seen as a break with some conservative idea of 'traditional philosophy.' Instead, the more accurate view would be that philosophy has been concerned throughout almost all of its history with questions about how ordinary people actually think and feel and that the experimental philosophy movement is simply seeking a return to this grand tradition.
I'd be curious to hear what others think about this issue, though. Do others see experimental philosophy as a radical break with the past, or do you see it (as I do) more as a retro approach to the discipline?
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