Quentin Pharr: "Inquiry and the Art of Methodology"

Date
12 February 2026, 10:15–12:00
Location
English Park, Eng/2-1022
Type
Seminar
Organiser
Department of Philosophy
Contact person
Matti Eklund, Pauliina Remes

Joint Seminar – The Higher Seminar in Theoretical Philosophy and The Higher Seminar in the History of Philosophy

Quentin Pharr, Uppsala University and St Andrews University: "Inquiry and the Art of Methodology"


Abstract
In writing about its aims, Jane Friedman (2023) has recently suggested that inquiring is a natural phenomenon, rather than an artifactual one. As presented, it is primarily intended as an objection to constitutivist accounts of the aim(s) of inquiry – according to which inquiring, like chess or snooker, has both some aim(s) and rules/norms that are constitutive of it and are thus normatively proper to it. But indirectly, her suggestion is also a partial defense of both a quietism about the aim(s) of inquiry, as well as a pluralism about the many ways in which inquiring can improve us epistemically. Despite its simplicity, then, it is ultimately quite a powerful suggestion. All the same, we should reject it. And, to make my case for why, I am going to draw on one of philosophy’s greatest methodologists, Aristotle, in order to suggest that, while basic cognition is natural and thus allows for some forms of inquiring to be deemed natural, methodical inquiring is ultimately infused with various psychosocial artifacts – namely, methods – and thus allows for some forms to be deemed artifactual.

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