World-disclosing arguments are a family of philosophical
argument described by Nikolas Kompridis in his book
Critique and Disclosure. According to Kompridis, these arguments have distinctive forms, sometimes called
styles of reasoning, that start with a disclosive approach instead of, or in addition to methods that are
deductive,
inductive, etc. According to Kompridis and Taylor, these forms of argument attempt to reveal features of a wider ontological or cultural-linguistic understanding (or "world," in a specifically ontological sense), in order to clarify or transform the background of meaning and "logical space" on which an argument implicitly depends. A major example of this type of argument is said to be that of
immanent critique, although it is not the only kind. In deductive arguments, the "test" of the argument's success are said to be its formal
validity and
soundness. However, in a world-disclosing argument, the primary criterion for success is the solution of a problem that could not be successfully dealt with under some previous understanding or paradigm, for example, after an
epistemological crisis (see
Paradigm shift). It is therefore said to be
possibility disclosing rather than "truth-preserving" or "truth-tracking." The "claim" made by such an argument is that of a new insight, resulting from the adoption of a new stance or perspective that reveals, or
discloses a new possibility for thinking and acting.
Nikolas Kompridis has described two kinds of
fallibilism in this regard. The first consists in being open to new evidence that could disprove some previously held position or belief (the taken-for-granted position of the observer in
normal science). The second refers to the consciousness of "the degree to which our interpretations, valuations, our practices, and traditions are temporally indexed" and subject to historical change. This "time-responsive" (as opposed to "evidence-responsive") fallibilism consists in an
expectant openness to some future possibility. According to Kompridis, world-disclosing arguments are fallible in both senses of the word. Major examples of world disclosing arguments in philosophy are said to include: •
Transcendental arguments, in which an understanding of some feature of experience is shown to
logically entail certain necessary conceptual pre-suppositions (e.g.
I. Kant's transcendental self, Heidegger's elucidation of ontological being in
Being and Time,
L. Wittgenstein's
private language argument in
Philosophical Investigations); • Dialectical arguments, where the premises argued from are shown to be logically
weaker than the argument's conclusion (e.g.
G. W. F. Hegel's
master–slave dialectic and
T. W. Adorno's
dialectic of Enlightenment); • Historical ontologies, such as those articulated by
Michel Foucault (the historical ontology of power),
Jacques Derrida (the historical ontology of meaning) and philosopher of science
Ian Hacking (
scientific revolutions); and • Forms of argument that, "through the use of
hermeneutic arguments and creative redescriptions" of our practices and cultural
paradigms, re-disclose the background of cultural meaning and "logical space of possibility". Other
modern philosophers who are said to employ world-disclosing arguments include
Hans-Georg Gadamer,
George Herbert Mead and
Maurice Merleau-Ponty. ==See also==