[The Problem Of The Criterion is] one of the most important and one of the most difficult of all the problems of philosophy. — Roderick Chisholm (1916 - 1999)
supposedly demonstrates the impossibility of knowledge. — TheMadFool
There seems to be an embedded contradiction..... — TheMadFool
an infinite loop with no way out. — TheMadFool
Propositions can't be true prior to the existence of a criterion (hence the need for a criterion) — TheMadFool
before we can answer question 2 we must answer question 1 — TheMadFool
The classic version of The Problem Of The Criterion claims that before we can answer question 1 we must answer question 2 BUT before we can answer question 2 we must answer question 1, effectively creating an infinite loop with no way out. — TheMadFool
The Scientific Method can determine or rather differentiate between what is more likely to be true and what is more likely to be false. Based on current circumstances or "reality" at the time of testing. Which generally remains the same for a long enough period to consider what has been derived from it as "useful". That's as close as we're going to get. — Outlander
Can we know something without knowing how we know it? Obviously. I know how to ride a bike without knowing the mechanics of balance (making minute steering adjustments opposite the direction of falling). — Pantagruel
A logical argument ends as merely a worthless sophism, when the means to create it necessarily presuppose the very impossibility it is meant to demonstrate. — Mww
This looks like a theory of truth, not a theory of how we know what is true. — Srap Tasmaner
Hence, perhaps the best way to formulate the Problem of the Criterion in its most general form is with the following pair of questions (Cling (1994) and McCain and Rowley (2014)):
(1) Which propositions are true?
(2) How can we tell which propositions are true? — Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Why? The other way around is obvious but this seems obviously not — Pfhorrest
According to the Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy: — TheMadFool
it is important to be clear about the nature of (1) and (2). These are not questions about the nature of truth itself. Rather, these are epistemological questions concerning which propositions we should think are true and what the correct criteria are for determining whether a proposition should be accepted as true or false. It is possible that one could have answers to these questions without possessing any particular theory of truth, or even taking a stand at all as to the correct theory of truth. Additionally, it is possible to have a well-developed theory of the nature of truth without having an answer to either (1) or (2). So, the issue at the heart of the Problem of the Criterion is how to start our epistemological theorizing in the correct way, not how to discover a theory of the nature of truth.
1. Propositions can't be true prior to the existence of a criterion (hence the need for a criterion) — TheMadFool
Are you talking about what makes a proposition true, or about how we know that it is true? — Srap Tasmaner
Knowledge then becomes perfectly possible within that rational-empirical framework. It just carries a proviso of not being infallible knowledge. Instead it is knowledge adequately tested for its fallibility. It passes the actual test of being reasonable. — apokrisis
Was I unclear that it was pragmatic? — apokrisis
(1) 'Dewey defeated Truman' is true iff [ insert theory of truth ]
(2) Alice knows that Dewey defeated Truman iff [ insert theory of knowledge ]
(2a) Alice knows that 'Dewey defeated Truman' is true iff [ same kind of theory as in (2) not as in (1) ]
(1) is about what happened, maybe about what properties that sentence must have and what other properties the world must have for that sentence to be true; (2) is probably about whether Alice believes that it happened and whether we by-and-large approve of how she came to believe that, but maybe something else; (2a) is a recasting of (2) to emphasize that (this sort of) knowledge is propositional. — Srap Tasmaner
(1) 'Dewey defeated Truman' is true iff [ insert theory of truth ]
(2) Alice knows that Dewey defeated Truman iff [ insert theory of knowledge ]
(2a) Alice knows that 'Dewey defeated Truman' is true iff [ same kind of theory as in (2) not as in (1) ]
(1) is about what happened, maybe about what properties that sentence must have and what other properties the world must have for that sentence to be true; (2) is probably about whether Alice believes that it happened and whether we by-and-large approve of how she came to believe that, but maybe something else; (2a) is a recasting of (2) to emphasize that (this sort of) knowledge is propositional. — Srap Tasmaner
Pragmatic, ok, but you still need a criterion for truth/knowledge — TheMadFool
There has to be a criterion for what it is to know before you can claim to know anything. You know that you can ride a bike because 1. you can ride a bike and 2. there's a criterion that helps you in establishing whether that (riding the bike) qualifies as knowledge. — TheMadFool
What are you talking about? That was it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criteria_of_truth#Pragmatic — apokrisis
People knew things long before there were criteria of knowledge, don't you think? — Pantagruel
Knowledge and truth are judgements - they need a criterion. — TheMadFool
So you are saying no one knew anything until there was epistemology? That doesn't seem right...... — Pantagruel
Like whatever. If you can point to this cop out, explain in what sense it is one, then you might have something to say. — apokrisis
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