The argument proposed by
Hans Albert runs as follows: All of the only three possible attempts to get a certain justification must fail: • All justifications in pursuit of "certain" knowledge must also justify the means of their justification, and doing so will require them to justify anew the means of their justification. Therefore, there can be no end, only the hopeless situation of infinite regression. • A circular argument can be used to justify its mock impression of validity and soundness, but this sacrifices its usefulness (as the conclusion and premise are one and the same, no advancement in knowledge has taken place). • One can stop at self-evidence or common sense or fundamental principles or speaking
ex cathedra or at any other evidence, but in doing so, the intention to install "certain" justification is abandoned. An English translation of a quote from the original German text by Albert is as follows: Here, one has a mere choice between: • An infinite regression, which appears because of the necessity to go ever further back, but is not practically feasible and does not, therefore, provide a certain foundation. • A logical circle in the deduction, which is caused by the fact that one, in the need to found, falls back on statements which had already appeared before as requiring a foundation, and which circle does not lead to any certain foundation either. • A break of searching at a certain point, which indeed appears principally feasible, but would mean a random suspension of the
principle of sufficient reason. Albert stressed repeatedly that there is no limitation of the Münchhausen trilemma to deductive conclusions. The verdict concerns also inductive, causal, transcendental, and all otherwise structured justifications. They all will be in vain. Therefore, certain justification is impossible to attain. Once having given up the classical idea of certain knowledge, one can stop the process of justification where one wants to stop, presupposed one is ready to start critical thinking at this point, always anew if necessary. This trilemma rounds off the classical problem of
justification in the theory of knowledge. The failure to prove exactly any truth, as expressed by the Münchhausen trilemma, does not have to lead to the dismissal of objectivity, as with
relativism. One example of an alternative is the
fallibilism of Karl Popper and Hans Albert, accepting that
certainty is impossible but that it is best to get as close as possible to truth while remembering our uncertainty. In Albert's view, the impossibility of proving any certain truth is not in itself a certain truth. After all, one needs to assume some basic rules of logical inference to derive his result, and in doing so, must either abandon the pursuit of "certain" justification, as above, or attempt to justify these rules, etc. He suggests that it has to be taken as true as long as nobody has come forward with a truth that is scrupulously justified as a certain truth. Several philosophers defied Albert's challenge; his responses to such criticisms can be found in his long addendum to his
Treatise on Critical Reason and later articles. == See also ==