It's not. Knowledge by skill is simply the means of testing, or justifying, your knowledge as a belief, by applying it.That's my point - knowledge as a skill is different from knowledge as a belief - as you point out. — Sam26
I don't disagree because as Ildefonso shows, he had both beliefs and skills in being a gardener. He had no formal teaching. He taught himself by experience without any language. Organizing nature into neat little groups is what the mind does and language is a tool that helps us do that more efficiently - especially for communicating. Observing plants grow over time provides you with the same information as some professor and textbook does. Using what you have learned tests your knowledge. There are gardeners of varying skill - all based on the beliefs that they have about plants which were accumulated through learning by doing and/or taught. Even the best still learn new things. Your skill is a reflection of what you know.The reason I brought this subject up, is that not only are there beliefs that are non-linguistic, there is also knowledge that's nonlinguistic (knowledge as a skill). How do we know this is the case, we can observe it in the actions of others. This is how we know there are other minds, we observe the actions of others, which are the same or similar to our own actions. — Sam26
Knowledge as a skill is simply applied knowledge as a belief. You can't apply beliefs that you don't have.There is knowledge as a belief, and there is knowledge as a skill. — Sam26
But people use the term, "know", to refer things that aren't so. They don't know that they don't know. They think they do, which is why they use the word. We used to know that the Earth was flat until we learned that it wasn't. We can only know that we didn't know after the fact of saying that we did. So how people use the word isn't always about what is so. Knowing is only the belief that you have the proper information to form a conclusion, when you might not.OK. Another way to put it is that 'observe' and 'know' are achievement verbs (Gilbert Ryle's term). You can't observe what isn't there or know what isn't so. — Andrew M
But what if I mistook someone washing the roof and seeing water running down the window for rain? I would claim to know that it is raining, and it would take another observation (moving outside of the house) to prove that I was wrong. If the prior observation was wrong, then what makes us so confident in observations? We used to think the Earth was flat based on observations. It took a more objective observation to show that we were wrong (looking at the Earth from space). How do we know when we have reached the most objective observation to say that we then possess knowledge?Justification (or warrant) comprises the rules that warrant someone making a knowledge claim. For example, your looking out the window warrants your claim that it is raining (or not raining). If the claim is true then knowledge has been acquired. (Gettier counterexamples aside which imply a further condition.) — Andrew M
Which isn't any different from saying that you know you know. You can know false things. You might say that people in the 14th century didn't know the Earth wasn't flat, but the way they used the word, they did. Saying that you know doesn't cut the cake, which is why my claim that how people use the term isn't good evidence for what knowledge is still stands. Observations aren't good evidence of knowledge because we can show how observations can be skewed or biased. So how do you go about determining the truth condition of some statement?No. Note that I said "think we know". You can't know false things. So if a mistake is discovered then any claim to knowledge is retroactively retracted. For example, if I later find out that the clock was stopped then I also realize that I didn't know that it was 3:00 earlier despite my claim back then being warranted. — Andrew M
Knowledge claims are just sounds or scribbles that symbolize our knowledge that is made-up of visuals, sounds, feelings, etc. Observations check our knowledge - the beliefs that aren't composed of words, but are composed of visuals and actions in our minds that are merely communicated via claims.Observations check our knowledge claims. A knowledge claim (or justified belief) can be false, knowledge can't. You can be warranted in making a knowledge claim (such as with the 3:00 example) but such warrant doesn't guarantee that the claim is true. — Andrew M
"Duck" is a word, not an animal. There were species before words. There are similarities and differences before words. These similarities are what we group under the symbol, "duck". The only reason we need the word, "duck" is to communicate all those things together. It's much easier to say "duck" rather than all those things that make a duck that we can observe. We don't need the word "duck" to observe that there are organisms that share more features and behaviors with others, and others that don't.Correct and that's important. But to say that a duck is all those things together that make a duck leaves us none the wiser about what a duck is. Neither does saying that a duck is whatever acts and looks like a duck. Both those definitions instead rely on a prior intuition (or definition) about what ducks are. For a definition to be useful, it needs a genus and differentia. — Andrew M
When you ask a 14th century person what they mean when they know that the Earth is flat, they will point to the Earth and show that they know by observation, and point to how others are saying the same thing.So differentiating and grouping (categorizing) just is the activity of defining noted above. Language is not fundamentally about arbitrary word symbols and sounds, but about the objects and activities they pick out. So we can ask about what people are doing when they use the word "know" or "observe". How are they using the term and what can we learn from an analysis of that use? — Andrew M
Like I said, if people say that they know that it is raining, when it isn't, then how are they using the word that is meaningful? How is how people use the term evidence that they know how to use it?Knowing that it is raining outside is an example of propositional knowledge (the proposition being, "it is raining outside"). If you look out the window and see what looks like rain then you can justifiably claim it is raining. If it is raining (the truth condition), then you know that it is raining. Whereas if someone was hosing the window while watering the garden, then you don't know it is raining (even though you may think you do).
The principle is the same whether talking about rain or the Red Sox. People can be informed (knowledgeable) or mistaken about either. — Andrew M
It seems to me that people can display knowledge without saying so. I know that you know how to tie your shoes by me observing you tie your shoes. No words need to be spoken. From this observation I can see that you have a belief about shoes and their laces being tied. Only if I never observed you tying your shoes would it be relevant to say so. Observing you tying your shoes and you saying that you know how to tie your shoes would be redundant information.That's probably the case. However, others become aware of these kinds of prelinguistic beliefs by observation, but only if they have the concept of belief. In other words, it's backward looking, it only happens, that I can say there are prelinguistic beliefs, from the perspective of language. It's only in language that we can talk about such beliefs. This causes confusion. — Sam26
No. I would say that the infinite regress of aboutness is a product of how we use the word, "knowledge". How we use the word is wrong because of this.Interesting, your question involves the phenomena of language. We might consider there is knowing without words. The whole animal kingdom has knowing without words (set of rules for interpreting). We also have knowing without words. Our words (set of rules for interpreting) separate us from our experience and interfere with our knowing. — Athena
We don't have different ideas about what the definition of a duck can include. Acting like a duck entails all the acts of a duck, which includes laying eggs. Looking like a duck entails all the appearances of a duck. There is also the taste and sound of ducks. All of these things together make one a duck. Cherry-picking among them doesn't make one a duck.Yes, they are distinguishable. But we seem to have different ideas about what your duck definition can include. The common definition for a duck specifies the genus which serves to exclude other things that just happen to have a similar appearance or behavioral characteristics. — Andrew M
The difference in the types of knowledge seems to depend more on what we are talking about. Referring to artificial social constructions as states-of-affairs that you have knowledge about (like who is President of the United States and who won the 2004 World Series) seems much easier than referring to natural states-of-affairs (like knowing when it will rain). In the former case, we have created our own truths, or pre-defined them. In the latter, we haven't. We are defining them based on experience and observations.No it isn't. Per the example above, we know that the Red Sox won the 2004 World Series. But no-one can know that they lost it, since they didn't lose it. That's what it means for truth to be a condition of knowledge (and not falsity). — Andrew M
Right, so truth is a condition of observations.You can only observe that it is raining if it is raining (if that's what you're referring to). — Andrew M
Right. And you can then know that you reflected by reflecting upon the reflection, ad infinitum.If I know that it's raining because I observed rain, then I can also know that I observed rain (by reflection). In that case, I would also know that I know (that it is raining). — Andrew M
Right, so mistaken, or false, is a condition of knowledge.The connection with language use is just that this is how we ordinarily use terms like "observe" and "know". But, of course, we can be sometimes be mistaken about what we think we know (such as when reading the time of a stopped clock). — Andrew M
Describing the shadows on the wall of a cave will never give you a satisfactory understanding of your surroundings no matter how sophisticated you are able to formulate your description of them. — ovdtogt
Our language is made up of many kinds of beliefs that can be called foundational or even bedrock, but not all foundational beliefs have the same structural significance...
What is the structure? — Sam26
I thought the same thing when I read that. Language is made up of many kinds of letters and words, not beliefs. Minds are made of beliefs, but beliefs aren't the foundation of minds. There are the brute sensory experiences that are the structure of our beliefs and the root cause of changing (restructuring) our beliefs.In other words: since beliefs are propositional attitudes, I consider them to be a component of mind, not language. — Galuchat
Ducks are a particular type of species - ones that produce fertile offspring. Ducks are part of the genus we call "birds", because they have wings and feathers. Human actors and robots are of a different category altogether with one of the attributes that defines them is their adaptive abilities and ability to mimic other organisms to a wide degree.The common definition for a duck specifies the genus which serves to exclude other things that just happen to have a similar appearance or behavioral characteristics. — Andrew M
Bandwagon fallacy. When you can use the term in such a way as, "I know that I know nothing", then something is wrong with our understanding of the term. If we can use terms like, "God" without any clear understanding of what "God" is, then the way most people use words is not good evidence that most people know what they are talking about.I'm of the view that truth is a condition of (propositional) knowledge which I regard as a thesis about how people ordinarily use those terms. — Andrew M
What, are you 12 years old?Er, no. Now 'that' is inconsistent. I'm not inconsistent, you are. If knowledge is an attitude Reason adopts towards some true beliefs, then people have knowledge when they have a 'true belief' that Reason is adopting that attitude towards. Not when 'they' have the attitude, but when 'Reason' does. Owned.
O.W.N.E.D
It isn't dumb, but it will appear that way to the dumb. If it was dumb, why am I finding it so easy to own you?
I so own you. — Bartricks
Oh yes, thinking of life as process instead of opposites is beautiful — Athena
Jack is a newlywed.
Oh really? Was Jack a newlywed in the past, present or future? — 3017amen
It seems to me that you are a bachelor until the ink dries, if the state of the ink is what determines whether you are a bachelor or married.As far as i'm concerned, I'm a married-bachelor until the ink of the registrars signature is dry. — sime
Sound like you just claimed the apple has no color at all.Great questions!
My first thought it reminds me of 'Vagueness' in LEM logic or bivalent qualities:
This apple is red.
Upon observation, the apple is an undetermined color between yellow and red, or it is mottled both colors. Thus the color falls into neither category " red " nor " yellow ", but these are the only categories available to us as we sort the apples. We might say it is "50% red". This could be rephrased: it is 50% true that the apple is red. Therefore, P is 50% true, and 50% false. Now consider:
This apple is red and it is not-red. — 3017amen
Then what do you mean by being asleep and being awake? Why use two different terms if they actually mean the same thing? What is the purpose of having two terms to refer to the same event?Just to break it down slowly, that would not be correct. Because, a person is in-fact awake, while being asleep. — 3017amen
Let's press on the "determinant" thing there. One way to look at the conditions under which a statement is true or false is to submit it to a T-sentence and see what happens. At face value, you can T-sentence the Liar:
"This sentence is false" is true if and only if this sentence is false.
The T-sentence (in a deflationary manner) sets out the truth conditions for the statement. Whether it provides a full account of what it means for a sentence to be true doesn't seem too relevant to me here, it's about whether arbitrary sentence interpretation requires the universal applicability of the T-sentence. — fdrake
Married and bachelor are two seperate and opposing qualities.Jack is a married bachelor
Jack is sleep-walking — 3017amen
They would only be meaningful if they were seperate statements on their own, not asserting two opposing qualities of the same thing.Contradictions are not meaningless. Rather, contradiction requires a plurality of meaningful statements. — creativesoul
Which is the same as saying it is meaningless.There is nothing that can make it true/false. That's the reason that it is neither. It doesn't have what it takes in order to be either. — creativesoul
This sentence is short.
This sentence is false.
Why is the first truth apt but not the second? — fdrake
So contradictions and sentences without any clear reference, are meaningless. Contradictions don't have any clear reference either. A contradiction is saying two opposing things about the same thing. One cannot be both a bachelor and a married man. Which one are they? They can't be both and claiming that they are both leaves no room to know which one they actually are until you observe the man wearing a wedding ring or not. Observations resolve contradictions by supplying the truth, and using our definitions, we find the other simply can't be the case when the other is the case.When held up in isolation of all else, "This sentence is false" is incapable of being false. It is also incapable of being true. It is neither coherent nor sensible. Meaningful... Sure. That's what makes it seem so puzzling. It's tempting to say "if it's false, it's true", or "if it's true, it's false"... that's what makes it puzzling... basing subsequent thought on the presupposition that it is even capable of being true or false.
It's not.
It has no empirically verifiable/falsifiable content. It has no truth conditions. There's nothing that can make it true/false.
"This sentence is false" is something often uttered when the speaker is pointing to a specific sentence that they believe contradicts what's happened and/or is happening. Excising "This sentence is false" from the only sensible context to say it in leaves something very important behind. Crucial. The referent of "this sentence".
Sentences that can be false have truth conditions. The Liar does not. Sentences that have referents and truth conditions are meaningful. Sentences that have neither referent nor truth conditions are utterly meaningless.
When properly accounted for - while it's in total isolation from it's normal use - "This sentence is false" is utterly meaningless. — creativesoul
All I have done so far is offer some examples of knowing-how reducing to knowing-that. I don't know if I'd say all of them do.So are you claiming that all knowing-how reduces to knowing-that? — Banno
What we need is a theory that joins the theory of the micro with the theory of the macro. The dualism is a result of our ignorance and skewed perspectiveWhat we need here is quantum physics and getting past dualistic thinking — Athena
Dualistic thinking is the solution to most problems. Most (everyday/philosophical) problems are dualistic by nature. — ovdtogt
You said that dualistic thinking is the solution and that the problem is dualistic by nature.The most obvious one that comes to mind would be nurture vs nature argument. But I can think of many: Freedom vs responsibility, private vs public... too many to mention all. Yin and Yang, Day and night, winter and summer, high tide and low tide. cold and warm, light and dark is a common thread in all philosophical pursuits. The pendulum of time sways to and fro. Even DNA is are 2 interconnected sinuses. Up and down like a spiral staircase they wind their way to the top. — ovdtogt
Like what?Dualistic thinking is the solution to most problems. Most (everyday/philosophical) problems are dualistic by nature. — ovdtogt
Reason is the effort to justify our beliefs and language-use is the effort to express reality in words and numbers. Language-use isnt necessarily a use of reason. We can say unreasonable things about reality using words and numbers.I would have accepted: 'reason is the effort to justify our beliefs' and that would not have precluded 'reason is the effort to express 'reality' in words and numbers'. — ovdtogt
Well, not really. He describes developing that theory as no more than farting.
It was rejected from the start.
I'll add to the dualities described here, by pointing out that one can know that such-and-such is the case; and that one can also now how to perform some action. The distinction between knowing how and knowing that is well worth considering.
Isn't it odd that we talk of knowing in both these cases? Why should we have the very same word for such disparate activities? — Banno
No, reason is the effort of linking justifications to beliefs.Reason is the effort to express 'reality' in words and numbers — ovdtogt
This is so inconsistent, it can't be philosophy.No, because now we can recognise that there are two distinct questions here - "what is knowledge?" and "when do we have knowledge?"
The answer to the first question is "an attitude Reason adopts towards some true beliefs". The answer to the second question, well, varies and we can only say rough-and-ready things about it. Such as that, for the most part, we have knowledge when we have a justified true belief, but not always - sometimes we can have knowledge without a justification, sometimes we can have a justified true belief and not have knowledge, and so on.
Hitherto most have thought that they were answering the first question - the "what is knowledge?" question - by answering the second. That's a big mistake. And in a way one is continuing to make it if one faults my view for not being able to answer the second, for that is to fail to recognise that the second is a quite distinct question. — Bartricks
How else do you find out what something is, except empirically? How people use terms can be inconsistent with their understanding of what it is they are talking about - like in this case of "knowledge".I don't see how you can define knowledge in such a way and then say that a person fits that definition yet doesn't possess knowledge. It's like saying, "It walks, talks and acts like a duck, but isn't a duck".
— Harry Hindu
The issue is that we're trying to empirically find out what knowledge is (or, linguistically, how people use the term), not legislate it.
A human actor or a mechanical robot that walks, talks and acts like a duck satisfies the above definition, but isn't a duck. — Andrew M
Why doesn't the person have knowledge if they fit all the requirements? Find what is missing and make it part of the definition.
— Harry Hindu
Right. So JTB is like Newton's theory of gravity. Newton's theory predicts the planet's orbits really well. Except for Mercury. So the question just is to find what is missing (or to posit a different theory altogether). — Andrew M
Definition, explanation, etc. whatever you want to call it. You need an explanation of "knowledge" - of determining the common features, or qualities, that entail "knowledge" and "knowing" - before you can say that others have it or not.No, that's quite wrong. It's not a 'definition'. It is a thesis. It was Plato's thesis. And it seems true for the most part. — Bartricks
How were the counterexamples devised? If a person exhibits the common features and qualities that are commonly understood as "knowledge", or "knowing", then the counterexamples must be assuming something else about "knowledge" than what is commonly understood. What are they assuming?But then counterexamples were devised - cases where although a person possesses what the thesis says they need to possess, it seems manifest to reason that they nevertheless lack knowledge. — Bartricks
What is a clear case of knowledge possession? How would you know unless you already have an idea of what knowledge is? In explaining a clear case of knowledge possession, you'd be defining the common features and qualities of knowledge possession. How does one possess knowledge, and how is that different from "knowing"?A philosopher tries to figure out what knowledge is by a combination of looking at clear cases of knowledge possession and seeing if there is anything they all have in common apart from being cases of knowledge and conceptual analysis. — Bartricks
It seems to me that you're not saying anything different than I am, except that you seem to be trying to using phancy words to say it, like with your Reason with a capital "R".Now it seems to me that there is nothing all clear cases of knowledge have in common apart, that is, from involving a true belief.
That doesn't mean that having a true belief is sufficient for knowledge - it is clearly not, for we can easily imagine cases in which someone has a true belief but does not have knowledge. Nevertheless, there seems nothing - apart from being cases of knowledge - that all cases of knowledge have in common apart from involving a true belief. Knowledge cannot be reduced to 'true belief', but there seems nothing else all cases of knowledge have in common.
And that's why I propose that knowledge itself is an attitude Reason is adopting towards true beliefs. Hence why there is nothing else they all have in common apart from being cases where an agent has a true belief. — Bartricks
The topic here is "what is knowledge?" There is already broad agreement that whatever else knowledge involves, it involves having a true belief and a justification for it. But there are cases where these elements are present yet the person does not possess knowledge. — Bartricks
If we weren't ignorant we wouldn't ask questions because we'd already have all the facts.
— Harry Hindu
Where do you have them, and how do you know? You're claiming no questioning. What summons them, then? — tim wood
How is this any different than saying that the universe is filled with information/facts that is the answer to some question?
— Harry Hindu
The Universe is not filled with facts. Facts are constructs of the mind. And they can only be considered 'Facts" if they contain 'truths. And 'truths' solve problems or answer questions. — ovdtogt
When I mentioned the probability of life I was speaking from a normal, probabilistic sense. I wasnt using this “probability after the fact” version, though I can see now I could have been more precise. I should have said “for life to have formed” or “for life to come to exist” instead of “for life to exist”. My mistake, but my points still stand. — DingoJones
You didn't answer my question.A statement that does not answer a question or solve a problem is not a fact. It is just a string of words that has no meaning or value. It does not contain a scintilla of 'truth'. — ovdtogt
