• ovdtogt
    667
    Just because you believe they are not justified to hold a certain belief does not mean they hold unjustified beliefs. What a solipsistic creature you are.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    Just because you believe they are not justified to hold a certain belief does not mean they hold unjustified beliefs. What a solipsistic creature you are.ovdtogt

    I didn't say that if I believe they hold unjustified beliefs, their beliefs are unjustified. This just underlines my point: you can believe your belief is justified without it being so.

    But even if I did hold the absurd view that if I believe someone is unjustified, necessarily they are unjustified, this would not imply I was a solipsist. Far from it: it would be a belief about the status of someone else's belief, and thus would imply I was not a solipsist.

    I think you'll be getting a bonus from Total Crap Plc this month.
  • ovdtogt
    667
    sometimes we can have knowledge without a justification[/quote]

    So are you going to retract that statement?
  • Bartricks
    6k
    Er, no. I think it is true and I provided an example of a case in which I might have knowledge yet lack a justification for my true belief. Read my reply to Andrew M above in which I describe it. Then say some crap about it.
  • ovdtogt
    667
    I might have knowledge yet lack a justificationBartricks

    Tell me one belief that you hold that you do not have a justification for.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    I described a case above. Here's another: there are four mugs in my sink. That's true, but it is too trivial for me to have any reason to believe it. Yet I do believe it, and it is true, and I seem to know it given that I formed it on the basis of the evidence (there appear to be four mugs in my sink).
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    No, I should assume neither until I have good evidence to do so. You are fallaciously mounting a kind of "argument from authority" here.Janus

    He's been all over the place...

    Fun though...
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    This claim:

    Reason asserts, requires, demands, bids, favours, values

    is 'true'.
    Bartricks



    What makes it so?creativesoul


    See the thread on Truth! And our evidence that such claims are true is that our reason represents them to be.Bartricks

    Looks like you're squirming to me...

    What makes that claim true? What makes the other claim false?

    Straight forward questions. Given that truth is prior to all language, it ought be a pretty straightforward answer.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    What makes that claim true? What makes the other claim false?creativesoul

    Again: see the thread on truth. This thread is on 'knowledge'.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    Reason does not use language. All assertion, direction, and prescription is language use. Reason cannot assert, direct, or prescribe.creativesoul

    Yes she can and does.Bartricks


    It is self-evident enough to say that persons and only persons assert, direct, and prescribe, because people use language. Reason does not. Reason is not equivalent to persons.
    — creativesoul

    Yes she is.
    Bartricks

    This is just ridiculous. I cannot take it seriously.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    This is just ridiculous. I cannot take it seriously.creativesoul

    That's the problem the closed minded have always had with new solutions to old problems
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    You'll have to do better than that...


    JTB is in no need of any solution. There's no problem with it. There are no examples of well grounded true belief that we would be unwilling to call knowledge if we first knew the flaws in both broken clocks and Gettier cases.

    I've already adequately argued for that by showing that both of Gettier's cases are cases of malpractice, and I've pointed out the obviousness that believing a broken clock is working does not count as good ground.

    We all know this is true.

    It doesn't matter if the believer doesn't realize the clock is not working. It's not working. They believe that it is working. That is false belief. False belief does not make good ground for knowledge. Luck? Sure. So, that case is not a case of well grounded true belief even if it is a case of being lucky.

    And...

    It is just absurd to deny the following...

    Reason is quite simply not the sort of thing that is capable of making assertions. Reason is not equivalent to a person. All Reason is language use. People are not. All Reason owes it's very existence to language use. People do not. People are prior to language use. Reason is not. People are prior to Reason. Reason cannot be equivalent to that which existed in it's entirety prior to it. People did. Reason cannot be equivalent to people.

    Now...

    Can we move on yet?
  • Bartricks
    6k
    I've already adequately argued for that by showing that both of Gettier's cases are cases of malpractice, and I've pointed out the obviousness that believing a broken clock is working does not count as good ground.creativesoul

    Christ, this is tedious. No. You. Haven't.

    Saying 'malpractice' a lot doesn't do anything. I don't have a clue what you mean by it - and nor do you, you just read it on a page on the internet somewhere and thought if you use it you'll sound like you're steeped in the literature.

    As for being well-grounded - well, I refuted that view. That view is refuted by cases in which someone's belief is based on another true belief, but fails to qualify as knowledge.

    here's my characterisation of this debate.

    Bartricks: here's an eye-wateringly brilliant thesis.

    Creativesoul: promising start, but let me teach you. Malpractice. Malpractice. Mally, pracky, tice.

    Bartricks: er, what?

    Creativesoul: grounded. Well grounded. True beliefs that have lots of ground around them are knowledge. There is no problem. I have spoken.

    Bartricks: not sure what you mean by 'well grounded'

    Creativesoul: I mean this. Or that. Or something.

    Bartricks: well, if you mean this, then this case refutes you.

    Creativesoul: answer this question

    Bartricks. Answered

    Creativesoul: Now this one....and this one....aand this one.

    Bartricks. Answered

    Creativesoul: Well, those answers aren't quite right. Now this one, and this one, and this one

    Bartricks: answered - why are you asking me these questions?

    Creativesoul: your view is silly. Ridiculous. Here's an argument against it that has premises that have nothing whatsoever to be said for them.

    Bartricks; Your argument appears to be rubbish.

    Creativesoul: your view is absurd. It isn't on the internet and I can't associate it with a big name. So it is rubbish.

    Bartricks: your argument is rubbish - its premise have nothing to be said for them and appear false on their face - my argument is good, as its premises are self-evidently true or conceptual truths.

    Creativesoul: there's no problem. As I showed you earlier. Yes, you took me to the cleaners, but I can't realise that becsaue I have blinkers on.

    Bartricks: here's my parody of our discussion

    Creativesoul: this is pointless. You can't receive my instruction. You don't listen to me or any of the other intellectual peons on here. You need therapy. You are a terrible person. How dare you use reasoned argument to show things. You are in need of help. Goodbye!!

    Bartricks: bye squidy.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    I've already adequately argued for that by showing that both of Gettier's cases are cases of malpractice, and I've pointed out the obviousness that believing a broken clock is working does not count as good ground.
    — creativesoul

    Christ, this is tedious. No. You. Haven't.
    Bartricks


    Did you miss this?

    Smith's belief in Case I is false. Gettier wants to say that Smith deduces and believes the proposition(via the rules of entailment) "The man with ten coins in his pocket will get the job", which is fine as long as the referent of "the man" is himself. Otherwise Gettier needs Smith to believe that someone other than himself will get the job... but he doesn't.

    Case II is a bit more complicated, but it basically amounts to what Smith's believing the disjunction consists of. Smith believes "'Either Jones owns a Ford or Brown is in Barcelona' because Jones owns a Ford." The disjunction is true, by the well known rules of disjunction... but not because Jones owns a Ford. So, Smith's belief is false.

    Seems perfectly clear to me that Gettier put forth an accounting malpractice(of Smith's belief) in both Cases.

    You certainly have not given in subsequent due attention.

    :brow:

    Or this?

    I've pointed out the obviousness that believing a broken clock is working does not count as good ground.

    We all know this is true.

    It doesn't matter if the believer doesn't realize the clock is not working. It's not working. They believe that it is working. That is false belief. False belief does not make good ground for knowledge. Luck? Sure. So, that case is not a case of well grounded true belief even if it is a case of being lucky.
    creativesoul

    Tedious?

    Fairly straightforward if you ask me. Which part of any of my arguments, in particular, are you objecting to and what are grounds supporting that objection?
  • creativesoul
    11.9k


    That's an odd account of what's taken place here. Accounting malpractice clearly to anyone who looks for themselves.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    As for being well-grounded - well, I refuted that view. That view is refuted by cases in which someone's belief is based on another true belief, but fails to qualify as knowledge.Bartricks

    Invalid inferences can be based upon true belief. They are not knowledge.

    So what?

    That's not a problem for well grounded true belief. Invalid inference is not well grounded. You seem to be a bit confused.
  • Athena
    3.2k


    Asking me how I think differently is like asking a person with schizophrenia how s/he thinks differently. The experience of being different is not easy to explain. :lol: How about people have thought I do drugs and I do not, or in forums, people rarely understand my intended meaning. I come to a thought with many different thoughts and I can not understand why others don't get the complexity, while they totally miss what I think is important.

    Kind of like you challenging me on the notion that quantum physics is not dualistic. In my mind, it is not dualistic :lol: Nothing is either/or. It is all this and that and that interacting.

    Is Quantum Physics the End of Dualism?
    by
    Thomas Herold
    Dualism seems to be the biggest concept in history ever. Quantum Physics may lead us to a new paradigm shift in consciousness.

    Our consciousness is programmed with the basic concept of dualism. Either it is this way or it is the other way, either it is good or it is bad. If you think about this you may find hundreds of other examples in your daily life. Wherever you look, look closely and you will find the concept of dualism.

    The belief in matter is another big concept science has come up with. In the last century Newton, Kepler and some other persons made sure this concept made it into every school book in the western world.

    Both concepts, dualism and matter are living on such a big scale that most people don't even realize that they are concepts.

    Is there a Hidden Purpose Behind the Concept of Dualism?
    This is more a philosophical question and it may lead to other concepts and not to the truth. So what is the truth? The truth is that every concept leads to an experience and by experiencing it we may fulfill it's purpose.
    Thomas Herold

    Looks like Plato's perfect forms doesn't it? I thought Plato's perfect forms were just a funky imagination, but now I see, with a different consciousness Plato's perfect forms make sense. When we do not understand something, perhaps we do not come to it with the necessary consciousness?
  • ovdtogt
    667

    Quantum mechanics providestwo fundamental examples of the duality between position and momentum, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle ΔxΔp ≥ ħ/2 stating that position and momentum cannot be simultaneously known to arbitrary precision, and the de Broglie relation p = ħk which states the momentum and wavevector of a free particle are proportional to each other.[1] In this context, when it is unambiguous, the terms "momentum" and "wavevector" are used interchangeably. However, the de Broglie relation is not true in a crystal.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    Yeah, it was fun for a bit, but vacuous claims, no matter how amusing they might be for a while, soon wear thin.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    That's not a problem for well grounded true belief. Invalid inference is not well grounded. You seem to be a bit confused.creativesoul

    Er, I think you're the confused one. You don't seem to understand how Gettier cases work, or have any stable notion of what a 'well grounded' belief is.

    Gettier style cases can be constructed for any mechanism of belief acquisition that does not guarantee the truth of the belief.

    Here's why. A belief can be justified, or well-grounded, or warranted, or whatever, yet false.

    So, just imagine such a scenario. That is, imagine that the procedure has been followed perfectly, yet the belief it has resulted in is false.

    Now imagine the case again, only imagine that this time the resulting belief is, by fluke, true.

    That's a Gettier case.

    And in such cases it seems clear to the reason of most that the believer falls short of having knowledge. They're arrived at their belief impeccably, and it is true, but it isn't knowledge.

    Thus, it seems that no combination of true belief and belief-formation procedure is sufficient for knowledge.

    As such knowledge itself cannot be reduced to some combination of true belief and belief-formation procedure.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    That's not a problem for well grounded true belief. Invalid inference is not well grounded. You seem to be a bit confused.
    — creativesoul

    Er, I think you're the confused one. You don't seem to understand how Gettier cases work, or have any stable notion of what a 'well grounded' belief is.

    Gettier style cases can be constructed for any mechanism of belief acquisition that does not guarantee the truth of the belief.

    Here's why. A belief can be justified, or well-grounded, or warranted, or whatever, yet false.
    Bartricks

    I'm going to attempt to get you to understand something... one more time...

    If a belief is justified(well-grounded) and false, then it poses no issue whatsoever for justified true belief. False beliefs are irrelevant.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    I'm going to attempt to get you to understand something... one more time...creativesoul

    No, take a humble pie and eat the whole thing - then go to the humble pie aisle in the supermarket and buy several more humble pies, and eat them.

    You - you - don't understand Gettier cases.

    Yes, obviously you don't have knowledge if you have a false belief. I said that. Everyone says that.

    I was saying how you 'construct' a Gettier case.

    So, once again, first imagine a case where a person acquires a belief impeccably, yet the belief is false.

    So, Smith believes Jones will get the job and believes that the person who will get the job has 10 coins in his pocket, and he has acquired both beliefs in an epistemically responsible way (and make that any way you goddamn like, short of a way that guarantees truth). Now imagine that Jones does get the job but he happens not to have 10 coins in his pocket.

    Now that - that - is not ('not') a Gettier case. That's a case in which a person has acquired a belief - the belief that the person who gets the job has 10 coins in his pocket - in an impeccable manner, yet it is false.

    Next step. Imagine the case again, but this time imagine that, by fluke, the belief is true. So, Smith - not Jones - gets the job and he happens, by fluke, to have 10 coins in his pocket.

    That - that - is a Gettier case.

    Why? Because now Smith has acquired a 'true' belief in an epistemically responsible manner. And yet it does not qualify as knowledge.

    Thus, the thesis that knowledge = true belief acquired in an epistemically responsible manner is false.

    By the way - the example I gave in which the person, by fluke, looks at the one working clock in a town in which every clock bar one has stopped.....does that remind you of a case?
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    So, Smith believes Jones will get the jobBartricks

    Try again...

    Smith believes that he - Smith - will get the job. His belief is well grounded(justified). It's also false.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    In Case I, the bit about 'the man with ten coins in his pocket' is the problem my good man... it's arrived at via entailment, which as I've already stated once, is not a problem as long as the referent of 'the man with ten coins in his pocket' is Smith himself.

    Do you understand that? Do you follow me here, so far?
  • Bartricks
    6k
    OMg - you really don't understand Gettier cases. No, in the original case Smith believes that Jones - Jones - will get the job, and he also believes that because Jones has 10 coins in his pocket that the person who will get the job has 10 coins in his pocket.

    So, Smith believes that the person who will get the job has 10 coins in his pocket.

    But as it happens, Jones does not get the job. Smith does. And Smith happens to have 10 coins in his pocket.

    Thus, Smith's belief that the person who gets the job has 10 coins in his pocket turns out - by fluke - to be true. Smith also acquired the belief in an epistemically responsible fashion. Hence, Smith has a justified, or well grounded, or warranted true belief - yet it doesn't qualify as knowledge.

    Also, if you knew your stuff - and you don't, but want to give the impression you do (hence your thinking you need to 'educate' me), then you'd be able to answer my question.

    So I'll ask it again: what case does my case involving the one working clock in the town full of clocks that do not work remind you of?
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    By the way - the example I gave in which the person, by fluke, looks at the one working clock in a town in which every clock bar one has stopped.....does that remind you of a case?Bartricks

    We can go through that one if you like... Gettier's been solved, whether you realized it not.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    Do you understand that? Do you follow me here, so far?creativesoul

    You don't understand the cases. YOu really don't.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    OMg - you really don't understand Gettier cases. No, in the original case Smith believes that Jones - Jones - will get the jobBartricks

    Alright, that's enough. You do not know what you're talking about. I suggest you peruse the paper.
  • Bartricks
    6k
    Hahaha - you really don't know your stuff. They're called 'fake barn' cases.

    They're very well known in the literature. Literature I seem to be better acquainted with than you.

    Yet you're confident about these matters - confident that Gettier cases have been 'solved'. Hmm. Interesting. I wonder who's right...…

    I suggest you peruse the paper.creativesoul

    I'm looking at it right now. I suggest you read me.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    Argh! My apologies. You're right. I forgot details. No matter though, if my understanding of the accounting malpractice is right, and it is....

    :yikes:

    Let's look at Case I...

    CASE I
    Suppose that Smith and Jones have applied for a certain job. And suppose that
    Smith has strong evidence for the fol1owing conjunctive proposition:
    (d) Jones is the man who will get the job, and Jones has ten coins in his
    pocket.
    Smith's evidence for (d) might be that the president of the company assured him
    that Jones would in the end be selected, and that he, Smith, had counted the
    coins in Jones's pocket ten minutes ago. Proposition (d) entails:
    (e) The man who will get the job has ten coins in his pocket.
    Let us suppose that Smith sees the entailment from (d) to (e), and accepts (e)
    on the grounds of (d), for which he has strong evidence. In this case, Smith is
    clearly justified in believing that (e) is true.
    But imagine, further, that unknown to Smith, he himself, not Jones, will get the
    job. And, also, unknown to Smith, he himself has ten coins in his pocket.
    Proposition (e) is then true, though proposition (d), from which Smith inferred
    (e), is false. In our example, then, all of the following are true: (i) (e) is
    true, (ii) Smith believes that (e) is true, and (iii) Smith is justified in
    believing that (e) is true. But it is equally clear that Smith does not KNOW
    that (e) is true; for (e) is true in virtue of the number of coins in Smith's
    pocket, while Smith does not know how many coins are in Smith's pocket, and
    bases his belief in (e) on a count of the coins in Jones's pocket, whom he
    falsely believes to be the man who will get the job.

    So, originally(without revisiting the paper) I had thought that the referent of "the man with ten coins in his pocket" needed to be Smith. I was mistaken about that. It needs to be Jones, because - as you've noted - that is who Smith believes will get the job...

    There... humble pie and all. My mistake... but an insignificant one. My charge of accounting malpractice still hold good. The rules of entailment permit a change in both meaning and truth conditions. Case I shows this nicely.

    Smith believed Jones would get the job, and no one else. Gettier needs Smith to believe someone other than Jones will get the job in order for his belief to be true, but he doesn't.

    What Gettier does show is that the rules of entailment are not logical for they do not preserve truth.
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