The former is about my state of mind, the latter about the state of the world. — Isaac
Correct but we don't know that.We can only arrive to a conclusion based on available facts. So our statements are evaluated as true or not true based on those facts. — Nickolasgaspar
Correct, but again our evaluation can only be made based on the available facts either we are happy or not. — Nickolasgaspar
In both cases(jury trial knowledge evaluation) we can never be absolutely sure and this is why in the case of the jury...the members don't choose between guilty and innocent! Like with every application of the Null Hypothesis, Significant findings are demanded in order to departs from the normal risk free position. So its always guilty/not guilty or true/not true without absolute convictions. — Nickolasgaspar
We need to acknowledge that our Knowledge and truth claims are limited by our nature, our methods and the rules of Logic. — Nickolasgaspar
We can only evaluate a claim as true or not true based on the facts that are currently available to us...not in an absolute sense, because we don't know if we have all the facts needed to make such an absolute evaluation.
So when a claim is true, it means that it is Only Currently true based on the limited available facts we have. — Nickolasgaspar
That is a complicated issue that must not only take freedom of contract and freedom of speech into account, but also social media's role as a public forum, and the almost monopolistic position it has gained in public discourse. — Tzeentch
I believe one should not face legal consequences (which is what being fired from one's job is), unless it constitutes a breach of the terms of employment as agreed upon in the employment contract. — Tzeentch
This conflates two matters: expressing one's opinions and being generally disruptive. A nice bit of framing. — Tzeentch
My gripe is a simple one. As far as I know, the only justification a transsexual man has for identifying himself as a man is that he feels/thinks he is a man. The absurdity of this transsexual logic is brought to the fore by applying it like so:
1. I feel/think I'm an elephant (man/woman)
Ergo,
2. I am an elephant (man/woman)!
Why is me going "I am an elephant" a delusion and a transsexual claiming "I am a man/woman" not? :chin:
By the way thanks for explaining BIID. Helpful! — Agent Smith
What it fails to show is that it must be. — Isaac
Again, you're just showing that "I know X" could be of a form similar to "the grass is green" where we could look to some empirical fact to show it's truth. You're not showing anywhere that is must be of that sort. — Isaac
It's perfectly plausible that we use the past tense of 'to know' to reference the relationship between our previous state of mind and out current beliefs about the state of the world, and the present tense to reference the relationship between our current state of mind and our current beliefs about that state of the world. — Isaac
The use of some perspective other than our own as the 'reality' we are talking about the confidence we have in our beliefs matching doesn't mean we always must use that perspective in all cases, only that we can. — Isaac
My argument is to look to the use of the term. It's used (present tense) in situations where the justifications are of a sufficient level. It's not reserved for use only when X is true. It's used in the past tense comparing to what we currently believe. Again, truth is not referenced at all. — Isaac
If John claims to know that the answer to the equation is 5 and Jane claims to know that the answer to the equation is 6 then at least one of them is wrong in their claim of knowledge. They can't both know the answer and yet have different answers. — Michael
And using this example; assume you start digging and break a gas pipe. You wouldn't say "I knew where all the gas pipes were, but I was wrong"; you would say "I didn't know where all the gas pipes were." — Michael
If I'm going to dig a hole in my yard, it's important that I know if there are buried gas pipes in that location — T Clark
This is why people dismiss philosophy as useless. Silly arguments about abstract ideas that have nothing useful to say about how to get along. — T Clark
Of course truth is important, but if it turns out later something I know is wrong, it doesn't stop being knowledge somehow retroactively. — T Clark
Say I have data chemical laboratory analysis data measurements for 100 water samples for 10 chemical constituents. So I have a 10 x 100 table of data. Is it true? What does that even mean? — T Clark
You left out the most important part - justification. Knowledge is information adequately justified for it's intended use. Different uses required different levels of justification. No knowledge can be absolutely certain. — T Clark
I suppose there must be an explanation on how to interpret these codes. — SpaceDweller
Where is this? In an African country or bible belt state. I don’t really regard either as an authority. — I like sushi
We can never be absolutely certain the information we have is correct — T Clark
Yeah, that was pretty much my starting point too. "It's true that the grass is green" adds nothing to "the grass is green". The 'it's true' bit is implied by the statement within the context of a particular language game, there's nothing more to the truth of 'the grass is green' than the grass being green. Likewise with 'I know' (again, in certain contexts), where "I know the grass is green" adds nothing to the statement "the grass is green". After all, to use a famous example, I can hardly say "I merely believe it's raining outside, and it's raining outside", It wouldn't make sense. The expression "It's raining outside" already entails that I know it to be the case. — Isaac
If I say "I to the shops go" that's not correct either. I haven't said anything false, and you'd probably understand what I mean, but it's not correct. — Isaac
But you know what I mean when I say 'voiture' is not the correct word for a car in English, yes?
It's not a falsehood. The four-wheeled personal transportation machine is une voiture. But it's the wrong word, in English.
You may not understand the way I'm trying to put that into words, but we can skip that bit, it's irrelevant if you already know what I mean.
I mean 'correct' in the sense that 'car' is correct and 'voiture' is not. — Isaac
"it is true that 'I know where my hat is', because I used the term correctly"
I don't see what that's got to do with the 'correctness' of a word. — Isaac
I mean why does it matter? Why correct the errant child? To what end? — Isaac
But what's wrong with saying something false? — Isaac
What's wrong with using the word 'bus' to refer to something that isn't a bus — Isaac
It's not about your ability to understand. — Isaac
'Correct' here means more than being understood because you mentally make up for my error, it's trying to get at an ideal assuming you don't have to. — Isaac
No, I mean 'correct' as in 'to be understood, to make sense'. No different to if I pointed to a tree and said "dog". I'd have just used the wrong word. " Tree" is the correct word.
I'm understood, if I say "I know where my keys are", to be very confident about my belief. I'm not understood to have verified the absolute truth about their location. As such, it seems reasonable to conclude I've used the term correctly, and I do indeed 'know' where my keys are.
The alternative seems really weird to me. That I say "I know where my keys are", I used all the terms correctly, but I don't actually know where my keys are. — Isaac
Finally it has reached even this place. The postmodern woke sillyness. — ssu
But, using this analysis, "I know where my hat is", when used to describe a high degree of confidence in my belief about the whereabouts of my hat, is exactly the right use of the term, and so it is true that "I know where my hat is", because I used the term correctly. Even if my hat turns out not to be there. — Isaac
The wiki article mentions an early response to this problem, which is also my response: you just have to amend "knowledge is justified true belief" with a condition which rules out false premises: say, "knowledge is true belief justified with true premises". — hypericin
I can't think of any Gettier Problem which survives this kind of analysis, or any other counterexample to:
Knowledge is true belief justified by true premises. — hypericin
A federal judge said Monday that then-President Donald Trump “more likely than not” committed federal crimes in trying to obstruct the congressional count of electoral college votes on Jan. 6, 2021 — an assertion that is likely to increase public pressure on the Justice Department to investigate the former commander in chief.
The determination from U.S. District Judge David O. Carter came in a ruling addressing scores of sensitive emails that Trump ally and conservative lawyer John Eastman had resisted turning over to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot and related efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election result.
Eastman wrote key legal memos aimed at denying Democrat Joe Biden’s victory. The judge was assessing whether Eastman’s communications were protected by attorney-client privilege and was analyzing in part whether Eastman, Trump and others had consulted about the commission of a crime.
“Based on the evidence, the Court finds it more likely than not that President Trump corruptly attempted to obstruct the Joint Session of Congress on January 6, 2021,” wrote Carter, who is based in California and has jurisdiction because that is where Eastman filed the case.
Internal White House records from the day of the attack on the U.S. Capitol that were turned over to the House select committee show a gap in President Donald Trump's phone logs of seven hours and 37 minutes, including the period when the building was being violently assaulted, according to documents obtained by CBS News' chief election & campaign correspondent Robert Costa and The Washington Post's associate editor Bob Woodward.
The lack of an official White House notation of any calls placed to or by Trump for 457 minutes — from 11:17 a.m. to 6:54 p.m. — on Jan. 6, 2021 means there is no record of the calls made by Trump as his supporters descended on the U.S. Capitol, battled overwhelmed police and forcibly entered the building, prompting lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence to flee for safety.
The 11 pages of records — which consist of the president's official daily diary and the White House switchboard call log — were turned over by the National Archives earlier this year to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack.
The records show that Trump was active on the phone for part of the day, documenting conversations that he had with at least eight people in the morning and 11 people that evening. The gap also stands in stark contrast to the extensive public reporting about phone conversations he had with allies during the attack.
You don't pay others enough to do it for you, though. — baker
On one side, ones nation provides their people with certain securities and services such as infrastructure, generally long lengths of diplomatically encouraged peace and prosperity, a protection and safety in numbers, the provision of resources etc. — Benj96
This some would argue it’s your personal duty as a man of fighting age to protect this social community that has nurtured and provided for you throughout your life. — Benj96
Should we always have a choice whether we fight? — Benj96
Kidding aside, the decision to take hormone blockers is very serious and can have long-term consequences, and I think is therefore best made by a mature mind. — praxis
Just what kind of damages are available to a parent in the action created by this law? If it's noted by a teacher that the Sacred Band of Thebes was made up of gay lovers (a matter of historical fact), or that Oscar Wilde was likely gay, for example, what damages are caused and how are they determined? Would expert testimony be required for them to be awarded? — Ciceronianus
YOU were the one that used the term "male" to refer to someone with XX chromosomes: — Harry Hindu
Is that what transpeople are saying - that their brain was transplanted into another body? — Harry Hindu
So I find it hard to believe that you would still identify as a man if you had estrogen in your system and you observed your body as that of a woman. — Harry Hindu
And in your example, you have memories of being a man. Transgenders don't have prior memories of being one sex that conflict with their actual sex. They claim to have always had these feelings. — Harry Hindu
