That's the contradiction. However it's not true that a proposition can be both knowable and unknowable is it? — Andrew M
Fitch's paradox shows that a contradiction follows from KP and NonO. — Andrew M
Line 9 contradicts line 3. So a contradiction follows from KP and NonO. — 2. The Paradox of Knowability - SEP
The contradiction means that one of the premises is false (KP or NonO). Not that "p & ~Kp" is both knowable and unknowable. — Andrew M
No. Line 3 of the SEP proof asserts that "p & ~Kp" is knowable, i.e., "<>K(p & ~Kp)". "<>K(p & ~Kp)" is then subsequently proved to be false. Therefore "p & ~Kp" is not knowable. — Andrew M
Line 9 contradicts line 3. So a contradiction follows from KP and NonO. — 2. The Paradox of Knowability - SEP
My thinking was that p is just a true proposition and "p & ~Kp" represents that it is an unknown truth. You now appear to be saying that it is this unknown truth which follows from the argument as unknowable:
— Luke
p is the unknown truth and that is expressed by the above conjunction. The conjunction itself is unknowable. — Andrew M
Because Alice can (speculatively) say of an unknown truth, t, that "t is true and no-one knows that t is true". — Andrew M
The conjunction itself is unknowable. — Andrew M
I would have thought that it was the unknown truth (of NonO) [i.e. "p & ~Kp"] that becomes unknowable upon the rejection of the knowability principle, rather than a [i.e. Alice's] statement regarding the unknown truth. — Luke
I would have thought that it was the unknown truth (of NonO) that becomes unknowable upon the rejection of the knowability principle, rather than a statement regarding the unknown truth.
— Luke
It's the latter. In the SEP proof, line 1 asserts that p is an unknown truth. Line 3 asserts that it is possible to know the conjunction from line 1. Finally, line 3 is shown to be false. The essential point here is that p and "p & ~Kp" are different statements - the former is unknown (but potentially knowable), the latter is unknowable. — Andrew M
The essential point here is that p and "p & ~Kp" are different statements - the former is unknown (but potentially knowable), the latter is unknowable. — Andrew M
it's showing that if we accept the knowability principle then all truths are known. — Michael
What follows from the knowability principle being denied has nothing to do with Fitch's paradox. — Michael
Assume that John argues that an omniscient God exists and that we have free will. Jane provides an argument to show that if an omniscient God exists then we don't have free will.
You then want to know what follows from an omniscient God not existing, which has nothing to do with Jane's argument. — Michael
I don't see why "p & ~Kp" is unknowable.
— Luke
Because knowing it renders it false. — unenlightened
Then just reject the knowability principle.I don't understand the problem. — Michael
Hence there is a contradiction between KP and NonO. They cannot both be true.
So someone who maintains that KP is true must deny NonO - they admit omniscience.
Hence, if all truths are knowable, everything is known. — Banno
And Luke is not the only one.
Folks, in outline, the SEP proof works as follows:
Part 1
Assuming KP and NonO, we derive line (3)
Part 2
Assuming A,B,C,& D, we derive Line (9)
Conclusion:
Line (9) contradicts line (3);
hence, one of the assumptions here is wrong.
Or we need an alternative logic.
A,B,C,D are unassailable (I'm sure that won't stop someone here making the attempt...)
Hence there is a contradiction between KP and NonO. They cannot both be true.
So someone who maintains that KP is true must deny NonO - they admit omniscience.
Hence, if all truths are knowable, everything is known. — Banno
I think you misunderstand Fitch's paradox. It is a reductio ad absurdum against the knowability principle. So, Fitch's paradox is literature that speaks to the rejection of the KP side. — Michael
Line 9 contradicts line 3. So a contradiction follows from KP and NonO. The advocate of the view that all truths are knowable must deny that we are non-omniscient:
(10)¬∃p(p∧¬Kp).
And it follows from that that all truths are actually known:
(11)∀p(p→Kp). — SEP article
...someone who maintains that KP is true must deny NonO - they admit omniscience. — Banno
The essential point here is that p and "p & ~Kp" are different statements - the former is unknown (but potentially knowable), the latter is unknowable. — Andrew M
Let K be the epistemic operator ‘it is known by someone at some time that.’ — SEP article
And suppose that collectively we are non-omniscient, that there is an unknown truth:
(NonO) ∃p(p∧¬Kp) — SEP article
Because Alice can (speculatively) say of an unknown truth, t, that "t is true and no-one knows that t is true".
Alice's statement will, in turn, be an unknown truth. While someone could come to know that t is true, no-one could come to know that Alice's statement is true. — Andrew M
I'm just not seeing how it follows from there being unknown truths, that there are unknowable truths. — Janus
…in the absence of omniscience, Fitch's paradox shows that there are true propositions that are unknowable. — Andrew M
OK, that seems fine: so it is possible to know there is an unknown truth; that does not mean it is possible to know an unknown truth (which would be a contradiction) but that it is possible to know that there is an unknown truth (which is not a contradiction). — Janus
I don't see how it follows from the fact that we know (if we do know) there are unknown truths that an unknown truth is knowable — Janus
the fact that there are unknown truths (if there are) is not itself an unknown truth (if it is known). — Janus
Can you lay out the argument clearly in plain English? — Janus
The paradox of knowability is a logical result suggesting that, necessarily, if all truths are knowable in principle then all truths are in fact known. The contrapositive of the result says, necessarily, if in fact there is an unknown truth, then there is a truth that couldn't possibly be known [i.e. an unknowable truth]. — Archived SEP article
I take it all truths are known implies that no truths are knowable (because they are known)?
— Luke
In fact the opposite: Kp → ◊Kp. — Michael
Suppose Tom wants to go to the party, but he doesn't know what time it begins. Furthermore, he doesn't even know anyone who does know. So he asks Bill, who doesn't know when the party begins, but he does know that Mary knows. So Bill tells Tom that Mary knows when the party begins. Now Tom knows something, too—that Mary knows when the party begins.
So Tom knows what Mary knows (he knows that she knows when the party begins). Now consider the following argument:
Tom knows what Mary knows.
What Mary knows is that the party begins at 9 pm.
What Mary knows = that the party begins at 9 pm.
Therefore, Tom knows that the party begins at 9 pm.
What is wrong with this argument? It commits the fallacy of equivocation.
In (A), “what Mary knows” means what question she can answer. But in (B) and (C), “what Mary knows” means the information she can provide in answer to that question. — Meno's paradox ambiguity
Technically speaking Fitch's argument shows that the knowability principle entails that all truths are known — Michael
However, it's a fact that some truths aren't know. Either "the Riemann hypothesis is correct" or "the Riemann hypothesis is not correct" is one such truth that isn't know. — Michael
Therefore, the knowability principle fails. — Michael
If there are no unknown truths then all truths are known. — Michael
However, in order to show otherwise, you would need to demonstrate that some unknown truth can be known.
— Luke
No, I need to show that there are no unknown truths, which is what Fitch's paradox does; see above. — Michael
Yes, either "the Riemann hypothesis is correct" is an unknown truth or "the Riemann hypothesis is not correct" is an unknown truth. — Michael
Which is a false interpretation. I've explained the logic several times. — Michael
And yet we don't know which of "the Riemann hypothesis is correct" and "the Riemann hypothesis is not correct" is true, but one of them must be. Therefore not all truths are known. — Michael
So either every true proposition is known to be true (abandon non-omniscience) or for some true propositions it is not possible to know that they are true (abandon knowability principle). — Michael
I'm not following your argument. — Banno
And suppose that collectively we are non-omniscient, that there is an unknown truth:
(NonO) ∃p(p∧¬Kp) — SEP article on Fitch's paradox
I don't think so. Logic deals in sentences, not meanings of sentences, whatever they are. — Banno
That thesis is demonstrably false. I am demonstrating its falsity by providing you with examples of truths that, if true - and it's metaphysically possible that they are - could not be known. — Bartricks
That proposition might be true. Assume it is. — Bartricks
Yes. I gave you some examples of such unknowable truths. — Bartricks
So, there's a case of a true proposition that I believe to be true and that is not known. — Bartricks
Yes. So? That a proposition is true does not entail that it is known to be. — Bartricks