Single Idea 5416

[catalogued under 12. Knowledge Sources / A. A Priori Knowledge / 2. Self-Evidence]

Full Idea

If propositions can have some degree of self-evidence without being true, we must say, where there is a conflict, that the more self-evident proposition is to be retained and the less self-evident rejected.

Gist of Idea

If self-evidence has degrees, we should accept the more self-evident as correct

Source

Bertrand Russell (Problems of Philosophy [1912], Ch.11)

Book Reference

Russell,Bertrand: 'The Problems of Philosophy' [OUP 1995], p.68


A Reaction

This is a key part of Russell's 'moderate rationalism'. Presumably the rejected propositions were therefore not self-evident, and can be used as training for intuitions, by seeing why we got it wrong. Fools find absurd falsehoods self-evidently true.