Gettier's case requires Smith to hold belief about Brown's location — creativesoul
I wrote:
Gettier's case requires Smith to hold belief about Brown's location.
You replied:
No it doesn't. It only requires that you believe that Jones owns a Ford. That's the whole point.
It's all about belief. I mean, that is precisely what grounds my objections here srap. Smith does not hold/have belief about Brown's whereabouts. — creativesoul
An either/or claim is a claim that one or the other is true. The problem with Gettier's case is that both could be. That is because they have nothing to do with one another. A proper either/or claim posits mutually exclusive propositions. The two cannot both be true. Thus, to put the two statements that Gettier has into an either/or form is ill-conceived. — creativesoul
When one says either X or Y, do you think that it makes any sense at all to put it like that if both X and Y are true or could be so? — creativesoul
Then Smith does not believe that Brown is in Barcelona. If Smith does not believe that Brown in is Barcelona, then Smith does not have JTB, and that's the whole point. — creativesoul
You wrote:
I'll spell it out more clearly for you.
1. My belief that p is justified
2. From 1, my belief that p ∨ q is justified
3. p is false and q is true
4. From 3, p ∨ q is true
5. From 2 and 4, my belief that p ∨ q is justified and true
6. I know that r if my belief that r is justified and true
7. From 5 and 6, I know that p ∨ q
although 6 looks out of place. It should say I know that q if my belief that q is justified and true. — creativesoul
The conflation is at 2. Belief that p v q does not require belief that q. Belief that q is precisely what the case requires in order to be a case of belief, regardless of whether or not it's justified or true.
(g) Either Jones owns a Ford, or Brown is in Boston.
(h) Either Jones owns a Ford, or Brown is in Barcelona.
(i) Either Jones owns a Ford, or Brown is in Brest-Litovsk.
Each of these propositions is entailed by (f). Imagine that Smith realizes the entailment of each of these propositions he has constructed by (0, and proceeds to accept (g), (h), and (i) on the basis of (f). Smith has correctly inferred (g), (h), and (i) from a proposition for which he has strong evidence. Smith is therefore completely justified in believing each of these three propositions. Smith, of course, has no idea where Brown is.
That is the problem.
If Smith can believe each of those three propositions, and those three propositions include contradictory statements about Brown's whereabouts, then either Smith believes Brown is in three places at once or believing each of those three propositions does not require belief about Brown's whereabouts. Since all three propositions include statements about Brown's whereabouts, and Smith has no idea where Brown is, it is clear that what Gettier counts as being justified in 'believing' each of those three propositions does not require belief that the statements about Brown's whereabouts are true.
So, then what does it mean to believe each of these three propositions if not believing that inferring p v q from p is justified? — creativesoul
What does it mean to believe each of these three propositions if not believing that inferring p v q from p is justified? — creativesoul
I note also that your examples have a p that is true. Gettier's p is false. Not sure what the ramifications of that are — creativesoul
I asked:
What does it mean to believe each of these three propositions if not believing that inferring p v q from p is justified?
You answered:
You believe that the disjunction p v q is true if you believe that p is true or if you believe that q is true.
Is that different than believing that inferring p v q from p is justified? — creativesoul
It seems like the only criterion for p v q being true is either p or q being believed.
It has nothing to do with believing that p v q is a justified inference from p, so I don't understand why you're bringing it up. Gettier is simply saying that because p v q is entailed by p then if a belief that p is justified then ipso facto a belief that p v q is justified.
..Each of these propositions is entailed by (f). Imagine that Smith realizes the entailment of each of these propositions he has constructed by (0, and proceeds to accept (g), (h), and (i) on the basis of (f).
Smith has correctly inferred (g), (h), and (i) from a proposition for which he has strong evidence. Smith is therefore completely justified in believing each of these three propositions. Smith, of course, has no idea where Brown is.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.