In order to get things done, one must hold certain things to be the case, not to be in doubt. One must hold some things as certain. — Banno
Both cases require believing that there is something to be mimicked; believing that another individual behaved in some certain way; believing that someone else did something or another — creativesoul
As far as the OP goes, you and I agree much more than disagree. It's when we unpack our respective notions of knowledge and belief that things begin to get more contentious. It seems that way to me anyway. — creativesoul
That is to draw a distinction between mimicry and mimicking for the sake of mimicking. — creativesoul
"In that" is not how I would put it. It's that mimicry presupposes at the very least, that the mimicker believe they are mimicking. — creativesoul
The most we seem to be able to conclude from more sophisticated parsings of "I doubt" is that "something doubts", and not what that something is. — Banno
I'm not fond of the notion of "proposition" — creativesoul
I think that you're getting at or pointing towards the kind of habitual muscle memory habits that develop given enough time and repetition. With that I'd wholly agree, but as "cross-purposes" implied, that's not what I was talking about. — creativesoul
Belief less creatures cannot know how to plane boards. — creativesoul
My point is that we can be aware of a particular thing without believing or knowing anything about that thing, we can believe a particular thing without being aware of or knowing anything about that thing, and we can know how to do something without believing anything or being aware of doing the thing.
Examples may help me to grasp what you're saying here. The above, as written, seems plainly false to me. I would argue that all three candidates/examples/suggestions are false, as they are written. — creativesoul
Either all knowledge is existentially dependent upon belief or it is not. — creativesoul
But I would go further and suggest that "absolute certainty" is a nonsense formed by concatenating two otherwise innocent words. Trying to make use of such a term leads immediately to misunderstanding. — Banno
That's intriguing. Especially the 'elevated experince and understanding' part of it. What would be an example of this? Are you thinking enlightenment... gurus and such? — Tom Storm
Perhaps the problem is not, not being able to find "absolute certainty", but the framing of these issues in terms of "absolute certainty". Garbage in, garbage out. — Banno
It is MORE accurate in every way to claim some dearth of awareness by forgoing the term 'knowledge' and similar absolutes that partake of perfection by implication. — Chet Hawkins
I've also generally held that there is no absolute certainty. And no realm where certainty or truth lives (in the Platonic sense). But I sometimes wonder what is served by adding the word 'absolute'. Isn't certainty finally just a human word, an artifact of language use and convention which can mean various things depending on context?
There are things we can call true because to deny them would result in catastrophe - eating arsenic, jumping from a plane without a parachute, etc. Which unfortunately for my antifoundationalist tendencies suggests that truth (certainly in some instances) is not merely a product of human construction but is grounded in an objective reality that exists independently of our beliefs and perceptions.
On the positive side, having a definition of knowledge or truth is of almost no use in my day-to-day life, so there is that. All I need to know about truth exists in convention, usage or domains of intersubjective agreement. — Tom Storm
I suppose what is noteworthy here would be to ascertain just how well you "got" what the other person was thinking. One thing is to have a general indication of what they may be thinking, the other is those moments of knowing exactly what they are thinking. But sure, point taken. — Manuel
They don'tknow it, though, do they? — AmadeusD
You may be a good mind-reader. Or you have special powers! — Manuel
You are confusing absolute knowledge with knowledge.
If knowledge is a justified belief that has a high enough probability of being true, then you can know you know X IFF you have a justified belief that has a high enough probability of being true that X.
All you have noted, is that you can’t be absolutely certain that it is true; which is not a qualification of knowledge. — Bob Ross
For example, take correspondence theory of truth: what makes the correspondance theory of truth true? If one accepts that theory, then they would say: it is true IFF it corresponds with reality. — Bob Ross
Not that it's super common, but not a miracle either. — Manuel
Knowledge requires that it is true, and not just a belief. Now, whether or not it is true is probabilistic, so it could turn out that what we think is true isn't; but that doesn't negate the importance of knowledge (i.e., true, justified, belief) vs. belief. — Bob Ross
Likewise, a belief could be justified, insofar as the probability of it being true is sufficient to warrant a belief, but not considered knowledge; because the probability of it being true isn't high enough.
Knowledge, to me, denotes sufficient confidence (credence) in it being true, given its probability/plausibility of being true. — Bob Ross
The essential issue is that the word 'knowing' is used to invoke delusional certainty, just like 'facts' and even the term 'certainty' itself. — Chet Hawkins
Humility and the 'fact' that I cannot know truth in any way, only approach it in many ways. — Chet Hawkins
It is not really the real me that is reading this. It is a subjective interpretation of me that I am projecting currently onto the real me. — Chet Hawkins
But I think that there are empirical facts of the matter.
Direct awareness, knowledge, and belief are distinct, but given the need for evolutionary progression, I cannot agree with claiming that they are independent. — creativesoul
Do you mean Chet has managed to escape before being burnt by the fire, together with the stick? — Alkis Piskas
The key thing about this limit to logically justified certainty is that it opens the mind sufficiently for things as a Buddhist enlightenment to occur. If not for this the true nature of reality would always be dismissed out-of-hand as ridiculously implausible and never even cross the mind as a remote possibility. — PL Olcott
That's one way to talk about it. — creativesoul
Because of the brain in a bottle thought experiment we cannot be logically certain of any empirical truth. Instead of saying {there is} a dog in my living room right now we must qualify this {there appears to be} a dog in my living room right now. It is not 100% logically impossible that all of reality is not a mere figment of the imagination. We can be logically certain that 2 + 3 = 5; — PL Olcott
Even if you want to bracket out 'knowing how' (and I agree with Moliere and @Banno that knowing is entangled with doing), there is still more than one way in which 'knowing that' is used propositionally — SophistiCat
Knowledge is bound to objective criteria for understanding whereas belief may involve subjectivity. However, the interplay between the objective and subjective may mean that the nature of belief and knowledge remains fluid in human understanding. — Jack Cummins
Yep. And if know-how were a subset of know-that, that might be a problem. But if knowing-that is a subset of knowing-how, that is not a problem - is it? — Banno
I may know how to ride a bicycle and that knowledge seems to have nothing necessarily to do with belief.
— Janus
Well, it implies belief in Bicycles and riding.
Animals know how to do things, and we commonly attribute knowing-that to them. The cat knows that the bowl is empty, and so on.
The temptation is there to draw a hard line between knowing-how and knowing-that. But they are not as distinct as folk might presume. — Banno
In both agreement and good standing. Glad to join you, if that's okay? — creativesoul
All knowledge requires belief.
— ENOAH
That's true, but the OP asks if knowledge is merely belief. Apparently, it's implying that the difference between knowing and believing is empirical verification or rational justification. And so, we argue about shades of truth. :smile: — Gnomon
Sure, knowledge is a rigorously arrived at belief in JTB theories of truth. — Bylaw
I don't think I've seen a propositional knowledge out in the wild though. I have seen the others I referenced. I can perhaps see a propositional knowledge out in the wild if I put a particular kind of retrospective goggles on. But if you insist... — fdrake
I'll argue that knowing-that reduces to knowing-how; so by way of an example knowing that water boils at 100℃ is knowing how to boil the kettle and how to use a thermometre and how to answer basic physics questions and so on. I take this as a corollary of meanign as use. The meaning of "water boils at 100℃" is what we are able to do with it.
Notice also that this approach makes knowedge more social or communal. It is part of our langauge use. — Banno
Do you subscribe to virtue ethics yourself?
Much of this would seem to be perspectival, 'virtue' perhaps being somewhat rubbery. — Tom Storm
I think this is an important question. I don't think it helps us at all to think of ethics as transcendental. I don't think ethics is transcendental except in its connection to aesthetics. Beauty is transcendental, and virtue ethics seems to connect virtues with what is generally attractive to humans. Courage is attractive, cowardice is not. Kindness is attractive, cruelty is not. Consideration of others is attractive, disregard of others is not, And so on.Either way, how does it help us to promote the notion of ethics as transcendental? — Tom Storm
