I'm pretty sure Bismarck is the capital of North Dakota — Srap Tasmaner
...rather than the usual justificationist sense of rationalism, whereby no belief is justified until it can be supported from the ground up somehow, instead any belief is justified (including contrary ones) until there is support to the contrary, i.e. reason to rule that belief out -- an epistemological position called critical rationalism, supported by philosophers like Kant and Popper. — Pfhorrest
So it's use consists almost solely in your being able to answer a quiz question.
That does not show that knowhow and knowing are incommensurable. — Banno
It's getting harder and harder for me to care about the ontological part. (I also can't help but see the dual-process story as validating the reliance of Hume and Ramsey on "habit", though it feels a little tendentious.)
Philosophers tend to want to focus on the status of claims (is it a belief? is it knowledge?) and on the status an individual is imagined as assigning to their beliefs. But it might be possible to quit doing that. In the usual case of belief revision -- I thought there were two packs of poptarts but when I look there's only one -- does it matter that my belief was marked as revisable or defeasible? I do revise with minimal hesitation, if any. The "hunh" I grunt is, by introspection, mild curiosity about how there came to be only one or why I thought there were two, but there's very minimal tension associated with the belief revision itself. — Srap Tasmaner
I wonder if there is really an issue there well described in terms of a belief's status at all, or if it's just more about reasoning processes, specifics of the evidence, etc. — Srap Tasmaner
You must demonstrate that the first premise in the chain is incontrovertible. I do that in my theory here: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/9015/a-methodology-of-knowledge
I do not want to distract from the OP's point here however. If you are interested in exploring how I solve this problem, feel free to visit. — Philosophim
Ah. Hence your inadequate response to Isaac. — Banno
What is so inadequate? He’s basically stating confirmation holism, as you pointed out, and I’m saying “no duh”. You rule out a complete network of beliefs, and replace it with something else that is not yet ruled out. Beliefs aren’t free-floating atoms, they’re all tied to other beliefs. — Pfhorrest
it being "not yet ruled out" is itself another belief — Isaac
That "reason why you can't" is not itself some other belief external to the rest of your preexisting beliefs, it's some inconsistency within your complete network of beliefs. That inconsistency, that ruling-out, does not compel any specific alternative belief, only that you revise something or other in your belief system to avoid that inconsistency. — Pfhorrest
methods of distinguishing knowledge from belief - it is the assumption that there exist methods of distiguishing knowledge from belief at all at the ontological level you want them to exist — Isaac
On my account, knowledge is a kind of belief, not something separate from it, and what we're discussing in epistemology generally is how to (practically) revise beliefs, in a way that avoids various problems that might otherwise arise in that activity. Epistemology is about identifying what problems might arise in that activity of belief-revision, and seeking out ways around them. Knowledge is just the subset of belief that can make it through such a process. — Pfhorrest
Critical rationalism turns the entire idea of justification on its head: rather than needing to have some belief to justify having some belief to justify having some belief, you may have whatever beliefs you like, until you encountera reason why you can't. — Pfhorrest
A "reason why you can't" will still be underdetermined... — Banno
That inconsistency, that ruling-out, does not compel any specific alternative belief, only that you revise something or other in your belief system to avoid that inconsistency — Pfhorrest
...only narrowing the range of possibilities... — Pfhorrest
How do you decide which is the first premise? Is it just the one you first thought of (temporally arranged)? In my example - A belief that A and a belief that evidence exists contrary to A (which we're calling a belief that B) - which is the 'first' premise and why? — Isaac
The target of the OP, I think is the religious, the flat-earthers, the creationists, the anti-vaxxers, the climate change deniers etc. But most people form beliefs of that more complex sort on the basis of reports from members of trusted groups. — Isaac
1. Have a belief A
2. Demonstrate that it is impossible for A to be contradicted through deduction.
3. A can become a prime premise for B, etc. — Philosophim
I've read the first and second of your essays, but neither address the degree to which deductive beliefs form networks. — Isaac
I think the real motivator, in terms of cultural history, is Nietzsche, Freud, Marx, and Darwin. It's Freud in particular: the revelation that we have something like "unconscious thoughts" and, more importantly, unconscious motivations, and unconscious commitments is troubling to people careful about how they think. — Srap Tasmaner
Should have mentioned Wittgenstein too (and Sellars). How do I know my argument is what I think it is? Am I actually relying on a simplistic picture I have of how this works? Am I taking words that make sense in one context and smuggling them into another context as if they still have that meaning? — Srap Tasmaner
philosophical methods of defending beliefs differ from those employed in more general senses — Isaac
The most notable distinction between living and inanimate things is that the former maintain themselves by renewal. A stone when struck resists. If its resistance is greater than the force of the blow struck, it remains outwardly unchanged. Otherwise, it is shattered into smaller bits. Never does the stone attempt to react in such a way that it may maintain itself against the blow, much less so as to render the blow a contributing factor to its own continued action. While the living thing may easily be crushed by superior force, it none the less tries to turn the energies which act upon it into means of its own further existence. If it cannot do so, it does not just split into smaller pieces (at least in the higher forms of life), but loses its identity as a living thing.
As long as it endures, it struggles to use surrounding energies in its own behalf. It uses light, air, moisture, and the material of soil. To say that it uses them is to say that it turns them into means of its own conservation. As long as it is growing, the energy it expends in thus turning the environment to account is more than compensated for by the return it gets: it grows. Understanding the word "control" in this sense, it may be said that a living being is one that subjugates and controls for its own continued activity the energies that would otherwise use it up. Life is a self-renewing process through action upon the environment.
The traditional philosophical definition of knowledge, dating back at least to Plato, is that knowledge is justified true belief. That is to say that it is not enough merely to believe something to be the case, and it is not even enough for that belief to turn out to be true, but for someone to know something they must also have a justification for their belief, a reason to believe it, because it would not constitute knowledge to simply guess at an answer to a question (or otherwise come to believe it for insufficient reason) and just by luck turn out to be right. — Pfhorrest
Edmund Gettier has since proposed that even justified true belief is not enough to constitute knowledge, to the extent that reasons to believe something can sometimes be imperfect, can suggest beliefs that nevertheless turn out to be false, yet we nevertheless want to say that someone can still be justified in believing something for such reasons. Because if justification can be imperfect, someone could be justified in believing something that, despite that justification, might nevertheless turn out to actually be false, and in such cases we would not want to say that it counts as knowledge to be misled by imperfect justifications to believe something that could nevertheless have still been false but, by an unrelated coincidence, does happen to also be true, just not for the reasons justifying the belief.
Being not ruled out is the default state of any belief under critical rationalism; it's not something that calls for justification. Critical rationalism turns the entire idea of justification on its head: rather than needing to have some belief to justify having some belief to justify having some belief, you may have whatever beliefs you like, until you encounter a reason why you can't. — Pfhorrest
Can you perhaps give an example? "...and you can show that B and C are contrary to each other"; the point of underdetermination is that you can't show this. There are innumerable reasons why A and B might appear to be contradictory, and yet not. — Banno
This seems to be suggesting that all beliefs, until and unless they are ruled out, enjoy equal status. — Janus
What happened to the reasons we hold beliefs in the first place? Are you not leaving degrees of plausibility (themselves determined by social, cultural and psychological influences, out of the picture? — Janus
What about beliefs that cannot be definitively ruled out; for example beliefs in compassion, love, sacred beauty, or ethical virtues. — Janus
Yes. Nobody's beliefs have a particular burden of proof over anyone else's. If you want to push your beliefs over someone else's, you've got to show that theirs are wrong, and more so that all the other alternatives besides yours are wrong; and saying "you can't prove they're right" is not showing they're wrong. — Pfhorrest
I'm not sure what you even mean by "belief in" compassion, love, or sacred beauty. That sounds like a different sense of the word "belief" that means "support". I don't think there's any practical controversy over the fact that people sometimes are compassionate, or loving, etc. But if there were any question about those things, it would be an empirical question. — Pfhorrest
How can you ever falsify either position, unless the starting assumptions about what constitutes a plausible reason for belief are shared? — Janus
“You care about something right? There’s something or another you’re trying to do in your life that you would rather succeed at than fail at, no? Well, here’s why being able to discern truth from falsehood is important for succeeding at all other things, and here’s why these principles are important for succeeding at the task of discerning truth from falsehood, and here’s some — Pfhorrest
You have to work your way down through the networks of supporting beliefs until you find something in common to work back up from. — Pfhorrest
Yes, but what happens if you apply this, for example, to theism? — Janus
There are many scientists who are also theists, and this apparently doesn't hamper their ability to do science just as well as an atheist scientist. — Janus
Also there are studies that purport to show that theists live longer, are healthier, and so on than atheists. — Janus
What if you can't find any? Say, for example, that someone believes that scripture is the ultimate evidence that outweighs all other sources? How are you going to find something in common to work back up from with such a person? — Janus
I think they're compartmentalizing their work from the rest of their thought, and so being inconsistent.
If they don't care that they're inconsistent, then there's nothing to do about it. — Pfhorrest
(My first hypothesis would be that theism is a common but not necessary consequence of excessive optimism, broadly speaking, in one's thought patterns, and that optimism generally has health benefits). — Pfhorrest
If they really believe scripture above absolutely everything else, and there is nothing that they care about more than conforming their beliefs to scripture, then they're a lost cause. Like the scientist above who doesn't care if they're inconsistent, if they really just don't care, then I don't care to struggle pointlessly trying to convince them otherwise — Pfhorrest
That's an avenue to start looking for some common ground, because I also care about their life and well-being, even though I don't believe in their scriptures, and if they had to choose between abandoning the scripture of abandoning their life and well-being (and were convinced that that actually was a choice between two different things, not tantamount to the same thing), I'd suspect (and hope) that they'd pick their life and well-being over the scriptures. — Pfhorrest
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