Here is where the bewitchment begins. The key word here is "accept". Accepting (g), (h), and (i) on the basis of (f) requires only realizing and accepting(believing) that the rules of correct inference allow such a thing. That much is indisputable.. — creativesoul
They cannot all be true
One cannot form and hold three contradictory beliefs simultaneously.
...
One can believe that three contradictory propositions all follow from the same p.
...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)...
One cannot accept that all three are true, because they all three contradict one another. One can accept that all three are valid. — creativesoul
No. Both are valid inference from p. You're neglecting the distinction between being valid and being true.
That is precisely the bewitchment. — creativesoul
He believes that all three are true by virtue of believing p and accepting the rules of valid inference. — creativesoul
Furthermore, if he really is justified in believing p, then because those three sentences really do follow from p, he really is justified in believing those three sentences.
No. If he really is justified in believing p, then because those three sentences really do follow from p, then his accepting them as valid is justified and true. — creativesoul
Yes. But be careful here...
His believing that they are true is nothing more and nothing less than his believing that the rules of disjunction allow him to randomly add any other statement to his belief that p and then call it "true" as a result of his believing that p. — creativesoul
That totally addresses Gettier. I'm showing that Gettier has claimed that Smith belief that g, h , and i are true aren't at all about the content of g, h, and i, but are rather about Smith's belief about the rules of correct inference. — creativesoul
One cannot believe that Brown is in three different locations. — creativesoul
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.