I mean why does it matter? Why correct the errant child? To what end? — Isaac
If I wanted a lecture I'd visit the university. I came here for a discussion. If you can't even be bothered to justify your assertions, then there's no point continuing. Things are not the case simply because they seem that way to you. — Isaac
I don't see what that's got to do with the 'correctness' of a word. — 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 like this home. At least I think I do. But do I really know that? What if it is a passing whimsy? How do I distinguish my preference of the moment from a stable preference that will endure 10 years from now. — hypericin
whether or not this activity is in itself philosophy, you must agree that it does, or can, bring the decider into contact with philosophical issues — hypericin
It may be how philosophy begins and then from it an ontology and epistemology is gradually built. — Tom Storm
Knowledge is adequately justified belief, whether or not it is true.
— T Clark
This is untrue (and therefore, not knowledge). — hypericin
Knowledge is a familiarity or awareness, of someone or something, such as facts (descriptive knowledge), skills (procedural knowledge), or objects (acquaintance knowledge), often contributing to understanding. By most accounts, knowledge can be produced in many different ways and from many sources, including but not limited to perception, reason, memory, testimony, scientific inquiry, education, and practice. — Wikipedia
Did the ancient Greeks know the earth was the center of the universe? — hypericin
I agree that "I know where my keys are" is grammatically correct, but it doesn't then follow that it's true. — Michael
I accept that "I know where my hat is" is a grammatically correct English sentence. But it doesn't then follow that it's true. — Michael
This is untrue (and therefore, not knowledge).
Did the ancient Greeks know the earth was the center of the universe? This is bad English. It is proper to say, they believed, or thought they knew. — hypericin
What good is a definition that does not represent what people normally mean when they say the word? Answer - not much. — T Clark
There were Greeks as long ago as 500 bce who theorized that the earth revolves around the sun. Just type in ancient Greeks heliocentrism. — T Clark
'Knew' is the past tense. We use the past tense differently to the present tense. — Isaac
to be clear, I'm not looking for someone to clarify what the standard theory is, I'm trying (or was) to explain a different theory (broadly Ramseyan - or my interpretation of it). — Isaac
So now meaning shifts with tense to keep your account coherent. And I'm the dogmatist. — hypericin
This is simply bad English, given that the speaker presumably knows that it does not. "Know" in English cannot be applied to something that is known to be false. Similarly, it cannot be applied to a guess, and be good English. This is not how "know" ought to be used, it is how it is used. — hypericin
to be clear, I'm not looking for someone to clarify what the standard theory is, I'm trying (or was) to explain a different theory (broadly Ramseyan - or my interpretation of it). — Isaac
Please. — hypericin
This is not even philosophy anymore, just basic English. — hypericin
knowledge
noun
uk
/ˈnɒl.ɪdʒ/ us
/ˈnɑː.lɪdʒ/
B1 [ S or U ]
understanding of or information about a subject that you get by experience or study, either known by one person or by people generally — Cambridge
knowledge
(nɒlɪdʒ IPA Pronunciation Guide )
1. uncountable noun
Knowledge is information and understanding about a subject which a person has, or which all people have. — Collins
Definition of knowledge
1a(1) : the fact or condition of knowing something with familiarity gained through experience or association
(2) : acquaintance with or understanding of a science, art, or technique — Merriam (for the Yanks)
If I've misunderstood Ramsey, I'd be grateful for your (well sourced) corrections. — Isaac
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
So a Justified True Belief model of knowledge would have no-one ever having knowledge, — Isaac
But then we go back to where I (and you) started. That's simply not how the word(s) is used. We don't use either 'know' or 'true' as if we were making claims to an asymptotical ideal which we will never reach (for a start, with the latter we already have such an option - we'd use 'truer', or 'more true'). If we don't use the words that way, then how can that be their meaning? Hence the need for a different understanding of them. — Isaac
Did MOST of the ancient Greeks know the earth was the center of the universe? — hypericin
This is simply bad English — hypericin
JTB is not perfect (which I pointed out in my op). But it is a far better model of how we actually use the word than your mental state theory. — hypericin
The problem is when you claim that because we use the phrase "I know where my keys are" when we have a strong belief then having a strong belief is all there is to knowledge, which is like saying that because we use the phrase "the grass is green" when we believe that the grass is green then believing that the grass is green is all there is to the grass being green, whereas most people understand that the grass being green has nothing to do with what we believe and that our beliefs can be mistaken. — Michael
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