[Knowledge] is both the belief in something, and a further belief that “the something” is co-existent with reality
I claim the sky is red while I clearly experience it as blue. The contrary existence of the blue sky negates my belief that it is red.
Without memories, how could I remember my claim to what a memory is and think to deny its reality?
Can you really believe in something without believing that “the something” is co-existent with reality? — Jarmo
Can you really believe something is red and at the same time experience it as blue? Or does that “negative belief” mean that you don’t actually believe, you just “claim”? — Jarmo
I don’t think that experience of remembering something requires that you actually have memories. I would grant that we both have memories, but I believe that at this point we step outside of absolute knowledge. — Jarmo
I can buy a lottery ticket believing that I will win, but with the knowledge that I probably will not. — Philosophim
So at the same time you believe that “you will win” and that “you probably will not win”? I don't think that is possible. — Jarmo
Yes you can. I can buy a lottery ticket believing that I will win, but with the knowledge that I probably will not. — Philosophim
You know a probability. You do not know before the draw date that it's a losing ticket.
You buy the lottery ticket not because you believe you will win, but because you hope you will win.
Two mistakes for two tries. Not a very strong argument. — god must be atheist
Further, you seem to be ignoring the context of the discussion, which is the paper. — Philosophim
You can have these thoughts with attendant feelings, but it does not make sense to say you have belief X and knowledge -X. You could say 'a part of me believes that I will win but I know the chances are lower than that part of me thinks.' Because we are not unified beings. But only in the context of parts of a self does it make sense.Yes you can. I can buy a lottery ticket believing that I will win, but with the knowledge that I probably will not. — Philosophim
I invite you to address a problem free of ego, and instead join me in a discussion. — Philosophim
when you practice the same thing. Ignoring my arguments ONLY because of my provocative style is not what I expected you to do. You answer the same arguments that I had presented when presented to you by Coben. He put it differently, but he said the same thing as I did.you try to make yourself feel good by putting another person down. — Philosophim
Apparently you take all counter-arguments that are based purely on logic and language, as malicious, direct, and uncalled-for attacks on your ego. — god must be atheist
The attachment uses a concept called "subjective deduction." Is that your theory or way of combining both a priori and a posteriori kinds of reasoning in an all inclusive way for gaining knowledge and wisdom? (And or perhaps combining subjective truths and objective truths.) — 3017amen
I have had people use the a priori and a posteriori words to relate before, and it has often caused them to misunderstand the points. Subjective deduction is really the best summary of what knowledge is. The "subjective" depends on the subjects involved. This may be the self, or the context of friends, scientists, the world, etc. — Philosophim
if we were to find and be certain of the truth, it would most likely come from a deduction, and not an induction. — Philosophim
That sounds like a subjective truth. A truth that relates to me and no other object. For example if I have a will to be or a will to exist, what deduction is required for the will? — 3017amen
It seems to me you're making a case for subjective idealism. — 3017amen
Since your holy grail is deduction, the consequence of such methodology in exploring or describing a particular truth value is tantamount to logical impossibility, when applied to the nature of a thing. — 3017amen
we can know will by application. — Philosophim
Deduction does not prove something to be true. — Philosophim
As long as reality does not contradict knowledge, then it is rational to hold such a viewpoint as being the best fit for what is true. — Philosophim
First, consciousness must be defined. Is is the consciousness of the poets, the consciousness of science, or something else entirely? — Philosophim
If we cannot apply it without contradiction, then we cannot applicably know consciousness within our distinctive context. — Philosophim
But we can't know it through deduction. — 3017amen
Would that mean you agree that deduction cannot adequately describe ontology/conscious existence? — 3017amen
All of the above, including all such tenants of philosophical idealism. — 3017amen
Deductive logic has taught us consciousness cannot be explained. — 3017amen
, deduction can adequately describe ontology or conscious existence without issue. It is all about defining it, then applying it. — Philosophim
How is this so? — Philosophim
Then please explain using logico deductive reasoning; driving while daydreaming and being in a coma, living yet not living. — 3017amen
I was giving an example in which a person believes they can win, but
knows they likely will not. — Philosophim
First I want to point out these are descriptions of two very different scenarios. The belief that one can win, but knows it is likely they will not, is a description of two beliefs (one a belief classed as knowledge, that do not contradict each other. The belief that one WILL win despite one's knowledge of the odds, is completely different.Yes you can. I can buy a lottery ticket believing that I will win, but with the knowledge that I probably will not. — Philosophim
First I want to point out these are descriptions of two very different scenarios. The belief that one can win, but knows it is likely they will not, is a description of two beliefs (one a belief classed as knowledge, that do not contradict each other. The belief that one WILL win despite one's knowledge of the odds, is completely different. — Coben
I'm afraid I am not going to read a long essay or series of essays online. If you prefer not to respond to people who won't read the paper, I'll understand. — Coben
Correct. One can have knowledge, but believe that knowledge is wrong. — Philosophim
It's an incomplete description at best. I can believe X and not X, though. I can believe that I will graduate college, that since I am managing my courses well, have been complimented by my professors, but also have a belief that I am a failure and won't manage. One can, and I have had, such contradictory beliefs, and then also not just about me, but about statements about the world.One cannot believe, and not believe the same thing — Philosophim
A belief is something one believes. And we often form beliefs through perfectly good non-conscous processes but which we have not done formally and consciouslly. We form beliefs through all sorts of processes some rigorous others not and both rigorous processes and not rigorous ones are fallible.A belief is simply a wish or desire that something is a particular way. — Philosophim
Knowledge is a logical process that must follow certain path, and arrives at deductive conclusions. — Philosophim
It's a discussion forum, people tend to present their ideas also in discussion form and I get knowledge via that. I think the medium is best suited for those discussions, but obviously people can use the forums in a variety of ways. Yes, I am not critiquing your theory in the sense that I am not critiquing your papers. But even in your presentation I see assertions that I can interact with. Conclusions. Those are yours and I can respond to them.That is fair. This OP is about those essays though. I would wonder why you would post if you aren't going to read the theory though. I can't imagine arguing about a theory I have no knowledge of. — Philosophim
Though one would also believe it was true. Knowledge is a kind of belief. — Coben
It's an incomplete description at best. I can believe X and not X, though — Coben
I can believe that I will graduate college, that since I am managing my courses well, have been complimented by my professors, but also have a belief that I am a failure and won't manage — Coben
Deduction being one process but not the only one, even within science say. — Coben
Yes, I am not critiquing your theory in the sense that I am not critiquing your papers. — Coben
You had knowledge there was going to be a meeting and then it was cancelled. You were correct that a meeting was scheduled.No, just because you have knowledge of something does not mean that you believe it to be true. I have knowledge of a meeting scheduled tomorrow at 5 pm. Is it true that the meeting will happen tomorrow at 5pm? It turns out someone cancels earlier in the day, and the meeting does not happen. — Philosophim
This means you arrived at this conclusion via some rigorous process. — Coben
I should add also that you are using a phrase that indicates less certainty that what one usually means when one uses the term knowledge: "had knowledge of." You also shifted to predictive knowledge, rather than, say knowledge about the world or some facet of it. — Coben
This claim seems to be that you were born with a set of beliefs that you that you've tested to create knowledge. — Megarian
Experience leads him to associate wet-spot with bottle contents. He tested this idea and confirmed its’ correctness. — Megarian
knowledge-claims are not created by belief-claims. — Megarian
Belief-claims can be tied to objective proofs (Certainty), subjective proofs (Certitude) or no proofs at all. It's knowledge-claims that require an objective justification to be valid. — Megarian
The main problem is logic as Justified True Belief (JTB). — Megarian
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