Introduction: The Idea of Innateness: Stich, Stephen P
Introduction: The Idea of Innateness: Stich, Stephen P
Introduction: The Idea of Innateness: Stich, Stephen P
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Introduction:
The Idea of Innateness
Innate Diseases
I observed . . . that there were in myself certain thoughts that did not
proceed from external objects, nor from a determination of my will, but
only from the thinking faculty that is in me; and therefore, in order to
distinguish the ideas or notions that are the content of these thoughts
from other ideas which are adventitious or manufactured, I called them
innate. It is in the same sense of the word that we say generosity is innate
in certain families; or again that in others certain diseases, e.g. gout and
the stone, are innate; not that infants of these families suffer from these
diseases in their mothers womb, but because they are born with a cer-
tain disposition or liability to contract them. (Descartes, Notes on a
Certain Programme)
In calling ideas innate, Descartes tells us, he is using the
same sense of the word we use when we say certain diseases are
innate. So let us launch our analysis of innateness by pursuing
Descartes hint and asking what it is to be afflicted with an
innate disease. Our strategy then will be to seek an analysis
of the notion of an innate disease. Armed with our analysis we
will return to tackle the thornier problem of innate knowledge.
To begin let us imagine a disease that at a certain stage,
is always characterized by a unique and easily observable set
of symptoms. (The lurid details are left to the reader.) In
imagining a disease always characterized by a unique set of
symptoms, we are making a simplifying assumption about the
relation between a disease and its symptoms. But the prey we
are stalking is innateness, not disease. A more realistic assump-
tion would complicate the discussion while shedding no further
light on the concept that interests us.
Now, under what conditions would we be willing to say
that someone having such a disease has it innately? A natural
first move is suggested by the parsing of innate as congeni-
tal or inborn. Perhaps to have the disease innately is just to
have the symptoms of the disease from birth. But, as Descartes
notes, this will not do. For a person may well have an in-
nate disease though none of its symptoms are evident at birth.
It may be that the symptoms appear only at some specific
stage later in lifeduring a certain age span, say, or accom-
panying some normal bodily change like puberty or menopause.
In such a case we are prepared to say that the person has the
4 INTRODUCTION
But rather than pursue this line, let us keep our attention
restricted to the second type of case. For ultimately the
subjunctive analysis will prove inadequate.
Returning, then, to cases of the second sort, let us
attend to a pair of further problems with the analysis as it
stands. First, consider the case of an infectious disease
caused, say, by a bacterial infection. Let us suppose that,
while the disease can be acquired at any age, the symptoms
appear during or after puberty. So a child may contract
the infection while still an infant. This, it would seem, is
a clear case of a person having a disease that is not innate.
Yet our analysis, as it stands, implies that the child has the
disease innately. From the time he contracts the infection
onward, it is true of him that if he were at puberty then he
would have the symptoms. Second, our analysis focuses on
the period of latency when the symptoms have yet to appear.
Thus it does not enable us to segregate innate from noninnate
diseases once the symptoms are present. Both these diffi-
culties can be patched if we swap a counterfactual locution
for an independent-of-factual conditional which is true of
the victim from the beginning of his life. We have, then: A
person has a disease innately if and only if, from the begin-
ning of his life it is true of him that if he is or were of the
appropriate age (or at the appropriate stage of life) then he
has or would have the diseases symptoms.
This leaves us with the nice problem of saying just when
a life begins. On the answer turns the distinction between
innate diseases and diseases caused by abnormal pregnancy.
Here I have no solutions to suggest. My suspicion is that the
distinction is a fuzzy one, and that on this score the notion
of innate disease is fuzzy. My only proposal is that for pur-
poses of our investigation we take life to begin sometime
before birth. This will collapse the distinction between the
two sorts of innateness, leaving our analysis applicable equally
to each.
Unhappily, our analysis is still not adequate. Its fault is
excessive pessimism. In defining the notion of innate disease
we have left no room for possible cures. Imagine an innate
disease whose symptoms, in the normal course of events,
6 INTRODUCTION
NOTES