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Bertrand Russell: The Problems of Philosophy

Chapter 6
On Induction
In almost all our previous discussions we have been concerned in the attempt
to get clear as to our data in the way of knowledge of existence. What
things are there in the universe whose existence is known to us owing to
our being acquainted with them? So far, our answer has been that we are
acquainted with our sense-data, and, probably, with ourselves. These we
know to exist. And past sense-data which are remembered are known to have
existed in the past. This knowledge supplies our data.
But if we are to be able to draw inferences from these data -- if we
are to know of the existence of matter, of other people, of the past before
our individual memory begins, or of the future, we must know general principles
of some kind by means of which such inferences can be drawn. It must be
known to us that the existence of some one sort of thing, A, is a sign
of the existence of some other sort of thing, B, either at the same time
as A or at some earlier or later time, as, for example, thunder is a sign
of the earlier existence of lightning. If this were not known to us, we
could never extend our knowledge beyond the sphere of our private experience;
and this sphere, as we have seen, is exceedingly limited. The question
we have now to consider is whether such an extension is possible, and if
so, how it is effected.
Let us take as an illustration a matter about which of us, in fact,
feel the slightest doubt. We are all convinced that the sun will rise to-morrow.
Why? Is this belief a mere blind outcome of past experience, or can it
be justified as a reasonable belief? It is not find a test by which to
judge whether a belief of this kind is reasonable or not, but we can at
least ascertain what sort of general beliefs would suffice, if true, to
justify the judgement that the sun will rise to-morrow, and the many other
similar judgements upon which our actions are based.
It is obvious that if we are asked why we believe it the sun will rise
to-morrow, we shall naturally answer, 'Because it always has risen every
day'. We have a firm belief that it will rise in the future, because it
has risen in the past. If we are challenged as to why we believe that it
will continue to rise as heretofore, we may appeal to the laws of motion:
the earth, we shall say, is a freely rotating body, and such bodies do
not cease to rotate unless something interferes from outside, and there
is nothing outside to interfere with thee earth between now and to-morrow.
Of course it might be doubted whether we are quite certain that there is
nothing outside to interfere, but this is not the interesting doubt. The
interesting doubt is as to whether the laws of motion will remain in operation
until to-morrow. If this doubt is raised, we find ourselves in the same
position as when the doubt about the sunrise was first raised.
The only reason for believing that the laws of motion remain
in operation is that they have operated hitherto, so far as our knowledge
of the past enables us to judge. It is true that we have a greater body
of evidence from the past in favour of the laws of motion than we have
in favour of the sunrise, because the sunrise is merely a particular case
of fulfilment of the laws of motion, and there are countless other particular
cases. But the real question is: Do any number of cases of a law
being fulfilled in the past afford evidence that it will be fulfilled in
the future? If not, it becomes plain that we have no ground whatever for
expecting the sun to rise to-morrow, or for expecting the bread we shall
eat at our next meal not to poison us, or for any of the other scarcely
conscious expectations that control our daily lives. It is to be observed
that all such expectations are only probable; thus we have not to
seek for a proof that they must be fulfilled, but only for some
reason in favour of the view that they are likely to be fulfilled.
Now in dealing with this question we must, to begin with, make an important
distinction, without which we should soon become involved in hopeless confusions.
Experience has shown us that, hitherto, the frequent repetition of some
uniform succession or coexistence has been a cause of our expecting
the same succession or coexistence on the next occasion. Food that has
a certain appearance generally has a certain taste, and it is a severe
shock to our expectations when the familiar appearance is found to be associated
with an unusual taste. Things which we see become associated, by habit,
with certain tactile sensations which we expect if we touch them; one of
the horrors of a ghost (in many ghost-stories) is that it fails to give
us any sensations of touch. Uneducated people who go abroad for the first
time are so surprised as to be incredulous when they find their native
language not understood.
And this kind of association is not confined to men; in animals also
it is very strong. A horse which has been often driven along a certain
road resists the attempt to drive him in a different direction. Domestic
animals expect food when they see the person who feeds them. We know that
all these rather crude expectations of uniformity are liable to be misleading.
The man who has fed the chicken every day throughout its life at last wrings
its neck instead, showing that more refined views as to the uniformity
of nature would have been useful to the chicken.
But in spite of the misleadingness of such expectations, . they nevertheless
exist. The mere fact that something has happened a certain number of times
causes animals and men to expect that it will happen again. Thus our instincts
certainly cause us to believe the sun will rise to-morrow, but we may be
in no better a position than the chicken which unexpectedly has its neck
wrung. We have therefore to distinguish the fact that past uniformities
cause expectations as to the future, from the question whether there
is any reasonable ground for giving weight to such expectations after the
question of their validity has been raised.
The problem we have to discuss is whether there is any reason for believing
in what is called 'the uniformity of nature'. The belief in the uniformity
of nature is the belief that everything that has happened or will happen
is an instance of some general law to which there are no exceptions.
The crude expectations which we have been considering are all subject to
exceptions, and therefore liable to disappoint those who entertain them.
But science habitually assumes, at least as a working hypothesis, that
general rules which have exceptions can be replaced by general rules which
have no exceptions. 'Unsupported bodies in air fall' is a general rule
to which balloons and aeroplanes are exceptions. But the laws of motion
and the law of gravitation, which account for the fact that most bodies
fall, also account for the fact that balloons and aeroplanes can rise;
thus the laws of motion and the law of gravitation are not subject to these
exceptions.
The belief that the sun will rise to-morrow might be falsified if the
earth came suddenly into contact with a large body which destroyed its
rotation; but the laws of motion and the law of gravitation would not be
infringed by such an event. The business of science is to find uniformities,
such as the laws of motion and the law of gravitation, to which, so far
as our experience extends, there are no exceptions. In this search science
has been remarkably successful, and it may be conceded that such uniformities
have held hitherto. This brings us back to the question: Have we any reason,
assuming that they have always held in the past, to suppose that they will
hold in the future?
It has been argued that we have reason to know that the future will
resemble the past, because what was the future has constantly become the
past, and has always been found to resemble the past, so that we really
have experience of the future, namely of times which were formerly future,
which we may call past futures. But such an argument really begs the very
question at issue. We have experience of past futures, but not of future
futures, and the question is: Will future futures resemble past futures?
This question is not to be answered by an argument which starts from past
futures alone. We have therefore still to seek for some principle which
shall enable us to know that the future will follow the same laws as the
past.
The reference to the future in this question is not essential. The same
question arises when we apply the laws that work in our experience to past
things of which we have no experience -- as, for example, in geology, or
in theories as to the origin of the Solar system. The question we really
have to ask is: 'When two things have been found to be often associated,
and no instance is known of the one occurring without the other, does the
occurrence of one of the two, in a fresh instance, give any good ground
for expecting the other?' On our answer to this question must depend the
validity of the whole of our expectations as to the future, the whole of
the results obtained by induction, and in fact practically all the beliefs
upon which our daily life is based.
It must be conceded, to begin with, that the fact that two things have
been found often together and never apart does not, by itself, suffice
to prove demonstratively that they will be found together in the
next case we examine. The most we can hope is that the oftener things are
found together, the more probable becomes that they will be found together
another time, and that, if they have been found together often enough,
the probability will amount almost to certainty. It can never quite
reach certainty, because we know that in spite of frequent repetitions
there sometimes is a failure at the last, as in the case of the chicken
whose neck is wrung. Thus probability is all we ought to seek.
It might be urged, as against the view we are advocating, that we know
all natural phenomena to be subject to the reign of law, and that sometimes,
on the basis of observation, we can see that only one law can possibly
fit the facts of the case. Now to this view there are two answers. The
first is that, even if some law which has no exceptions applies
to our case, we can never, in practice, be sure that we have discovered
that law and not one to which there are exceptions. The second is that
the reign of law would seem to be itself only probable, and that our belief
that it will hold in the future, or in unexamined cases in the past, is
itself based upon the very principle we are examining.
The principle we are examining may be called the principle of induction,
and its two parts may be stated as follows:
(a) When a thing of a certain sort A has been found to be associated
with a thing of a certain other sort B, and has never been found dissociated
from a thing of the sort B, the greater the number of cases in which A
and B have been associated, the greater is the probability that they will
be associated in a fresh case in which one of them is known to be present;
(b) Under the same circumstances, a sufficient number of cases
of association will make the probability of a fresh association nearly
a certainty, and will make it approach certainty without limit.
As just stated, the principle applies only to the verification of our
expectation in a single fresh instance. But we want also to know that there
is a probability in favour of the general law that things of the sort A
are always associated with things of the sort B, provided a sufficient
number of cases of association are known, and no cases of failure of association
are known. The probability of the general law is obviously less than the
probability of the particular case, since if the general law is true, the
particular case must also be true, whereas the particular case may be true
without the general law being true. Nevertheless the probability of the
general law is increased by repetitions, just as the probability of the
particular case is. We may therefore repeat the two parts of our principle
as regards the general law, thus:
(a)The greater the number of cases in which a thing the sort
A has been found associated with a thing the sort B, the more probable
it is (if no cases of failure of association are known) that A is always
associated with B;
(b) Under the same circumstances, a sufficient number of cases
of the association of A with B will make it nearly certain that A is always
associated with B, and will make this general law approach certainty without
limit.
It should be noted that probability is always relative to certain data.
In our case, the data are merely the known cases of coexistence of A and
B. There may be other data, which might be taken into account, which
would gravely alter the probability. For example, a man who had seen a
great many white swans might argue by our principle, that on the data it
was probable that all swans were white, and this might be a perfectly
sound argument. The argument is not disproved by the fact that some swans
are black, because a thing may very well happen in spite of the fact that
some data render it improbable. In the case of the swans, a man might know
that colour is a very variable characteristic in many species of animals,
and that, therefore, an induction as to colour is peculiarly liable to
error. But this knowledge would be a fresh datum, by no means proving that
the probability relatively to our previous data had been wrongly estimated.
The fact, therefore, that things often fail to fulfil our expectations
is no evidence that our expectations will not probably be fulfilled
in a given case or a given class of cases. Thus our inductive principle
is at any rate not capable of being disproved by an appeal to experience.
The inductive principle, however, is equally incapable of being proved
by an appeal to experience. Experience might conceivably confirm the inductive
principle as regards the cases that have been already examined; but as
regards unexamined cases, it is the inductive principle alone that can
justify any inference from what has been examined to what has not been
examined. All arguments which, on the basis of experience, argue as to
the future or the unexperienced parts of the past or present, assume the
inductive principle; hence we can never use experience to prove the inductive
principle without begging the question. Thus we must either accept the
inductive principle on the ground of its intrinsic evidence, or forgo all
justification of our expectations about the future. If the principle is
unsound, we have no reason to expect the sun to rise to-morrow, to expect
bread to be more nourishing than a stone, or to expect that if we throw
ourselves off the roof we shall fall. When we see what looks like our best
friend approaching us, we shall have no reason to suppose that his body
is not inhabited by the mind of our worst enemy or of some total stranger.
All our conduct is based upon associations which have worked in the past,
and which we therefore regard as likely to work in the future; and this
likelihood is dependent for its validity upon the inductive principle.
The general principles of science, such as the belief in the reign of
law, and the belief that every event must have a cause, are as completely
dependent upon the inductive principle as are the beliefs of daily life
All such general principles are believed because mankind have found innumerable
instances of their truth and no instances of their falsehood. But this
affords no evidence for their truth in the future, unless the inductive
principle is assumed.
Thus all knowledge which, on a basis of experience tells us something
about what is not experienced, is based upon a belief which experience
can neither confirm nor confute, yet which, at least in its more concrete
applications, appears to be as firmly rooted in us as many of the facts
of experience. The existence and justification of such beliefs -- for the
inductive principle, as we shall see, is not the only example -- raises
some of the most difficult and most debated problems of philosophy. We
will, in the next chapter, consider briefly what may be said to account
for such knowledge, and what is its scope and its degree of certainty.
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