Marty
The KK principle says that, for any proposition p, if one knows that p, then one knows that one knows it.
Mariner
Marty
T Clark
The KK principle says that, for any proposition p, if one knows that p, then one knows that one knows it. — Marty
frank
Is our knoweldge to us, in all ways, transparent? Why would we say we hold a belief that is a justified true belief, if we haven't reflected on it? With unconscious "beliefs", would we be better off with calling them casual dispositions instead of justified beliefs? — Marty
Janus
The KK principle says that, for any proposition p, if one knows that p, then one knows that one knows it.
I think this principle is implicit in a lot of philosopher's epistemological foundations, but seems wrong. — Marty
frank
Does knowing that one knows something imply absolute certainty, like really, really knowing it? — Janus
Pneumenon
Harry Hindu
Mr Bee
SophistiCat
"S knows that P" -> "S knows that S knows that P."
"S knows that S knows that P" -> "S knows that S knows that S knows that P"
This seems like such a basic point that I'm sure proponents of the KK principle have thought of it, but what's the reply? How does this not imply that, in order to know something, I have to know that I know that I know that I know... ad infinitum? And what would that mean? If it's supposed to be intelligible that I can know that I know something, then the whole regress should be intelligible, right? — Pneumenon
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