I suppose the latter is the implication of fallibilism. If knowledge does not require certainty then I can know everything even if I am not certain about anything. In this case I have fallible omniscience.
And I think certainty is only possible if the truth is necessary, so infallible omniscience requires that all truths are necessary.
So far as I can see your problems have been addressed successfully. — Banno
"I might be wrong" here means, it is possible that aliens do not exist. That is, there is a possible world in which aliens do not exist. — Srap Tasmaner
I should add: if you don't like my translation of (2), and would prefer it to be something like "It is possible there are no aliens here, in this world" then, in the presence of a further premise that there are or are not aliens here, this can only be understood as an epistemic possibility -- that is, as a way of saying I don't happen to know. — Srap Tasmaner
(2) breaks down into cases, right?
(2a) I'm not wrong, and aliens do exist here.
(2b) I am wrong, and aliens do not exist here.
Are both of those cases consistent with premise (3)?
No, they are not. By disjunctive inference, we are forced into the (2a) branch. — Srap Tasmaner
"Possibly" in current math would be a conjecture. It would go nowhere logically by itself. "Believe" really would be nonsense in mathematics. — jgill
2. It is unacceptable to say that we can have knowledge that is not certain
3. It is unacceptable to say that we can have knowledge that is not necessarily true — Michael
3. It is acceptable to say that we can have knowledge that is not necessarily true — Michael
This entire thread has been devoted to confusing "I have knowledge of something that need not be the case" with "I have knowledge of something that may not be the case." — Srap Tasmaner
But no one ever says "I know for a fact there are three left, but I could be wrong."
Why not? — Srap Tasmaner
I think the reason that this conclusion seems counterintuitive is that even if we claim to be fallibilists there is this intuitive sense that knowledge entails certainty.
there is a possible world in which aliens do not exist. — Srap Tasmaner
But no one ever says "I know for a fact there are three left, but I could be wrong."
Why not? — Srap Tasmaner
1. I believe with justification that John is a bachelor
2. My belief might be wrong
3. John is a bachelor
4. Therefore, my true (from 3) justified belief (from 1) might be wrong (from 2) — Michael
Argument 2 is invalid. If John is a bachelor, then her justified belief is true - it is not metaphysically possible for it to be false. — Relativist
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