A sufficiently skeptical position is completely immune to criticism, or to any other form of argument. I don't see what anyone could hope to do about that, beyond not bothering arguing with people who profess such extreme skepticism.
(I am reminded of a little fable I think I saw in an old OB post. Human space travellers encounter an alien planet whose inhabitants have adopted an anti-inductive principle, with the unsurprising result that pretty much everything they do is miserably unsuccessful. The humans ask them "So why do you keep on doing this?" and they say "Well, it's never worked for us before...")
Are you familiar with Sextus Empiricus? If you like intransigent skepticism, you'll love him. And the SEP just published a new entry on him! While you are at it, you might want to look at this entry on a priori justification.
You are trying to answer Descartes' Evil Daemon argument. That is futile, because the whole point of the argument is to be unbeatable. But suppose you did come up with an argument against it; I can always come up with an even stronger "daemon" or whatnot that can defeat the argument. (There's always the classic "How d
This now has 90 comments, including 2 of my own. None of them are particularly enlightening, IMO, but this is still evidence that it's interesting or amusing. As such, I've retracted my downvote.
If the point is we can't derive the validity of probability from nothing, congratulations. You have rediscovered something significantly less useful than the wheel or fire.
So if you can't derive the validity of probability from nothing, what can you do?
1) Walk around in a self-induced fog of feigned ignorance, having slipped the fact that you have put logical derivation on a throne dictating "truth" without ever having questioned that operation. You certainly can't derive from nothing that logical derivation is the only source of truth.
2) Loo...
how are said axioms to be justified?
This is how I'd answer a sceptic:
If I put two apples into a bag that previously had two apples, I can take four apples out of the bag. Thus, I believe that axioms on which basic arithmetic is based are "justified". By the same token I believe axioms of probability and I'm pretty sure you see a close approximation of a "fair coin" on a daily basis, not to mention more complex behaviors which probability theory predicts very well. If after that you're still skeptic of the correlation, I expect you to...
Why should I take the skeptic seriously?
I cannot picture how I would live my life without coping with uncertainty. And I know that probability follows from various plausible axiomatizations of uncertainty. (E.g, Cox's theorem)
This makes me suspect strongly that the skeptic is playing terminological games, since there's no actual substantive thing I could do differently if they convinced me.
Belief in the axioms of probability theory is justified by the fact that someone with inconsistent beliefs can be Dutch-booked.
If you're willing to put money on your beliefs (i.e. bet on them), then you ought to believe in the axioms in the first place, otherwise your opponent will always be able to come up with a combination of bets that will cause you to lose money.
This fact was proved by Bruno de Finetti in 1930-ties. See e.g. AI: A Modern Approach for an easily approachable technical discussion.
how you answer a skeptic about ... reality
The standard answer is a punch in the nose. I have yet to meet a claimant to skepticism willing to let me perform this experiment enough times to get a trustworthy result.
Lighter-weight skeptics (those willing to at least tentatively accept some postulates about reality being real, and the validity of predicting future experiences) generally have no problem with "I can't justify these from first principles, but I'm using them until I can think of better".
"the question isn’t how to arrive at the Truth, but rather how to eliminate error. Which sounds kind of obvious, until I meet yet another person who rails to me about how empirical positivism can’t provide its own ultimate justification, and should therefore be replaced by the person’s favorite brand of cringe-inducing ugh." -- Scott Aaronson
There are all kinds of things that are true in every possible universe that aren't self-evident. Look up "necessary a posteriori" for examples. So no, self-evident is not the same as necessary, at least not according to a very popular philosophical approach to possible worlds (Kripke's). More generally, "necessity" is a metaphysical property, and "self-evidence" is an epistemic property. Just because a proposition has to be true does not mean it is going to be obvious to me that it has to be true. Even Descartes makes this distinction. He doesn't regard all the truths of mathematics to be self-evident (he says he may be mistaken about their derivation), but presumably he does not disagree that they are necessarily true. (Come to think of it, he may disagree that they are necessarily true, given his extreme theological voluntarism, but that's an orthogonal debate.)
As for your question about standards: I think it is a very plausible principle that "ought" implies "can". If I (or anyone else) have an obligation to do something, then it must at least be possible for me to do it. So, in so far as I have a rational obligation to have justified beliefs, it must be possible for me to justify my beliefs. If you're using the word "justification" in a way that renders it impossible for me to justify any belief, then I cannot have any obligation to justify my beliefs in that sense. And if that's the case, then skepticism regarding that kind of justification has no bite. Sure, my beliefs aren't justified in that rigorous sense, but if I have no rational obligation to justify them, why should I care?
So either you're using "justification" in a sense that I should care about, in which case your standards for justification shouldn't be so high as to render it impossible, or you're using "justification" in Descartes's highly rigorous sense, in which case I don't see why I should be worried, since rationality cannot require that impossible standard of justification. Either way, I don't see a skeptical problem.
It seems we're using different definitions of words here. Maybe I should clarify a bit.
The definition of rationality I use (and I needed to think about this a bit) is a set of rules that must, by their nature, correlate with reality. Pragmatic considerations do not correlate with reality, no matter how pressing they may seem.
Rather than a rational obligation, it is a fact that if a person is irrational then they have no reason to believe that their beliefs correlate with the truth, as they do not. It is merely an assumption they have.
I've raised arguments for philosophical scepticism before, which have mostly been argued against in a Popper-esque manner of arguing that even if we don't know anything with certainty, we can have legitimate knowledge on probabilities.
The problem with this, however, is how you answer a sceptic about the notion of probability having a correlation with reality. Probability depends upon axioms of probability- how are said axioms to be justified? It can't be by definition, or it has no correlation to reality.