Huh? Is it not possible to doubt it is true? Is it not possible to believe it is true?
That it is impossible to know it is true is what is accepted. And from there, we move on to a more achievable ambition. Why bang your head on a brick wall? — apokrisis
Not so. People were logical before Aristotle developed formal logic. However, that doesn't mean the principles of logic were different before and after Aristotle. — TheMadFool
Exactly. So having knowledge does not depend on having a criterion of knowledge. — Pantagruel
What? I propose that as a belief and thus it is open to doubt. And you yourself have only provided reasons that would confirm.
If you can show it is not impossible to know after all, then my position might be in trouble. — apokrisis
Do you know that "...it is impossible to know it is true"? — TheMadFool
The Problem Of The Criterion does the exact opposite I'm afraid - show you that it's impossible to know. — TheMadFool
Time for you to decide which of these two statements you believe — apokrisis
That's not what I said. There was, had to be, a criterion. How else would you know a proposition is true/false? We just didn't make that explicit for reasons that are obvious - nobody was bothered by it. — TheMadFool
Propositional knowledge is a particular subset of knowledge and not its primary form for organic beings. All kinds of creatures "know" things. So saying that a special feature of propositional knowledge "knowing that it meets a criterion" is a limitation on knowledge per se is invalid. It is like saying that all matter must be wet because water is wet. The "criterion" of knowledge in its most general form is its successful application, as I suggested. — Pantagruel
Don’t you realise that you are conflating two usages of “know”. To know what the problem is said to be, and to accept the problem as a true one, are different things. — apokrisis
My question would be how sure are you that semantics don't play a role here? Do you believe every word open to interpretation in Chisholm statements were interpreted by you in the manner as they were written or intended? — Outlander
1. What do we know? or What is the extent of our knowledge?
2. How do we know? or What is the criterion for deciding whether we have knowledge in any particular case? — TheMadFool
(1) Which propositions are true?
(2) How can we tell which propositions are true? — TheMadFool
I wonder what this leads to? Any ideas? — TheMadFool
Knowledge and truth are judgements - they need a criterion. — TheMadFool
This is beside the point thought. What I'm actually interested in is what the criterion for knowledge/truth we're using in this conversation is. — TheMadFool
Mathematics provides sufficient reason for claiming proof that knowledge is possible, and from that, a system arises in which the criteria for all judgements, both a priori and a posteriori, follow necessarily. — Mww
Then a generalized criterion of validity for propositional knowledge would be that it is (potentially) capable of self-validation. So depending on the nature of the proposition, it would fit within a larger scientific-coherent framework, a la Karl Popper. — Pantagruel
1. What do we know? or What is the extent of our knowledge? — TheMadFool
Self-validation. Ok. I can go with that but what I want to know is does The Problem Of The Criterion make sense to you? It can only make sense to you if you know what it is but that's impossible because The Problem Of The Criterion says that you can't know anything at all, including The Problem Of The Criterion itself. So, if you know The Problem Of The Criterion then you can't know it - contradiction. What led to this contradiction? The Criterion which allowed us to make sense of (know) The Problem Of The Criterion. Something's off... — TheMadFool
Know/knowledge and criterion. We all "know" (right?) what these words mean. But they can hold meanings some support and others think are either overly-complex or even oversimplified. Or you can just be lazy and call it splitting hairs. — Outlander
What say you? — TheMadFool
What is the extent of our knowledge? — TheMadFool
What is the criterion for deciding whether we have knowledge... — TheMadFool
Yes, I think that the problem of the criterion arises from comparing knowledge in two different senses, what we know (which is always specific) and how we know it (which is a question about knowledge in general, at the meta-level). So the second question, "How am I capable of having knowledge at all" is really a red herring. I do have knowledge; you have knowledge; my do has knowledge.
Maybe we cannot account for how we know, any more than we can account for how we think. It is just a faculty. To me, it makes more sense to investigate the causes of error.... — Pantagruel
Vague — TheMadFool
If so consider the argument contained in The Problem Of The Criterion. It entails, for reasons you already know, the fact that nothing can be known. Basically, The Problem Of The Criterion justifies the inadequacy of any and all logical justification i.e. knowledge is impossible but it all hinged on you having knowledge of The Problem Of Induction. In other words, logic isn't self-validating as you would've liked. In fact it's self-refuting in this context. — TheMadFool
Well good luck to you.
— Srap Tasmaner
Thanks but I suppose you were being sarcastic. — TheMadFool
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