• Cheshire
    1.1k
    Are you talking about the justification for assigning necessity or possibility to a proposition? SO your hierarchy has necessary truths at the top, necessary falsehoods at the bottom, and all sorts of contingencies in between?

    I don't see what the problem you are trying to solve is.
    Banno

    In my car are a lot of fluids. One of them is necessary for the car to run. I suppose it doesn't mean anyone of them is more or less a fluid. I thought I saw something. Maybe not.
  • khaled
    3.5k
    but there can't be things we know that are not true.Banno

    What’s the difference between this and:

    knowledge is a belief that cannot be falsekhaled
  • Banno
    24.9k


    There can be true things we don't know. but there can't be things we know that are not true.Banno

    knowledge is a belief that cannot be falsekhaled

    If you had said "knowledge is a belief that is not false" we might have agreement. The difference is that one can believe one knows something, but be mistaken.
  • khaled
    3.5k
    If you had said "knowledge is a belief that is not false" we might have agreement. The difference is that one can believe one knows something, but be mistaken.Banno

    Yes, and I'm asking what the point of this is. Instead of simply saying "I do not know whether or not X is true/false", you now made it "If I know X that means X is not false, but I do not know whether or not I know X" so in the end, you do not know whether or not X is true/false.

    So why define knowledge such that you are not wrong about something that you know, but you can still be wrong about whether or not you know something? It doesn't net you any extra certainty or anything. Just seems weird to me.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    ...why define knowledge such that you are not wrong about something that you know,khaled

    I'm not wrong about anything I know.
  • khaled
    3.5k
    Yes, that's what I meant.

    But you can't tell whether you know anything or you just think you know it.

    So in the end you still can't tell whether you're right or wrong. So what's the point of the loop de loop?
  • Cidat
    128
    It's one thing for something to be true, but another to know it's true. I can believe I exist, and it may be objectively true, without actually consciously knowing it's true. I define knowledge as conscious mental awareness of truth. Objectively I may experience something, without knowing this experience is actually occurring (according to my definition). Epistemological skeptics believe humans cannot actually know anything, only believe things.
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    So what's the point of the loop de loop?khaled
    It keeps the definition of knowledge consistent with the JTB model of knowledge. Which is an ideal, like a perfect circle, but useful in teaching and discussing the idea of knowledge.
  • CheshireAccepted Answer
    1.1k
    I'm not wrong about anything I know.Banno
    How do you know?
  • dclements
    498
    For example, does anyone continuously hold an absolute truth for how to speak? Does anyone continuously hold an absolute truth for never robbing a bank? Etc.Cidat
    I believe you are talking about is do people still believe in Immanuel Kant Categorical Imperative or something along those lines.

    https://www.britannica.com/topic/categorical-imperative

    It is just about a given that the answer is "yes" that many people rely on such thinking, but thinking it such ways is both highly flawed and highly problematic. In a nutshell many of the philosophers and people during the time Kant was alive thought that morality and ethics were not that complicated so they treated it with some like kid gloves when dealing with it. However the issues with ethics/morality ARE NOT simple as Kant and other like him believe them to be and in fact they are what is called a NON-TRIVIAL problem (ie. a problem so complex that is so complex that it might not be able to be solved by humans or possibly not solved at all).

    The first philosophy to really grapple the problem with such think (or at least the first one I'm aware of) is Søren Kierkegaard who explained that we have to use "subjective truths" to grapple with our understanding of moral/ethical issues and not reply on what we think are objective truths since there ma not be any objective truths or at least as far that we know of. It is Kierkegaard way of thinking who has guided many of the philosophers who came after him (at least in the subject of moral/ethical issue) and he is considered by some to be the "grandfather" of post-modern philosophy, although such a title many or many not be a good thing.
  • khaled
    3.5k
    I'm not wrong about anything I know.
    — Banno
    How do you know?
    Cheshire

    because if something we thought we knew turned out to be false, we only thought we knew it.[/quoteBanno
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    Feels like an answer you get in church. At the same time there's enough coherence to maintain it; I guess. Knowledge consists only of things I happen to be correct about. The rest is merely knowledge garnish.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    And yet we know that this thread is in English.
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    And yet we know that this thread is in English.Banno
    And the earth goes around the sun, but one of them wasn't always so obvious.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    And...?

    It keeps the definition of knowledge consistent with the JTB model of knowledge.Cheshire

    Indeed it does, but that's not the motive here. Rather its just the observation that saying one knows something that is false is an erroneous use of "know"; that claims such as "I know the word is flat, but it isn't true that the world is flat" are infelicitous.

    We talk about stuff we know all the time, but @khaled would have us not do so, replacing knowledge with mere belief. The infelicity remains: "I believe the word is flat, but it isn't true that the world is flat". Knowledge carries more weight than mere belief. The JTB account tries to capture this by adding truth and justification, and although not entirely successful, it does highlight the advantage knowledge has over belief.

    There's a reason we have the word "know" and use it sometimes rather than "belief". Mandating that we not do so decreases the power of English.
  • Apollodorus
    3.4k
    That's why I've always been interested in the reality of intelligible objects - like numbers.Wayfarer

    My theory is that intelligible objects like numbers or like Plato's Ideas are too close to the subject that thinks about them to be perceived as objects.

    But if we assume that Plato was committed to a reductivist approach that sought to reduce the number of fundamental principles to the absolute minimum, then he was very close to it. I think it makes sense to say that when consciousness organizes itself in order to generate cognition, it would start with the most basic universals such as number, size, shape, color, distance, etc. which it would use as building blocks of experience.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    It's one thing for something to be true, but another to know it's true. I can believe I exist, and it may be objectively true, without actually consciously knowing it's true. I define knowledge as conscious mental awareness of truth. Objectively I may experience something, without knowing this experience is actually occurring (according to my definition). Epistemological skeptics believe humans cannot actually know anything, only believe things.Cidat

    Good to have you back in the conversation, since it is your OP.

    Scepticism has a habit of capturing one's attention. Once one learns to question everything, one can feel that it is impossible to reestablish a firm footing. But there's a funny thing about doubt: one needs a basis in order to start doubting.

    But consider this image:
    graffiti-question-everything-why-facebook-cover.jpg
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    My theory is that intelligible objects like numbers or like Plato's Ideas are too close to the subject that thinks about them to be perceived as objectsApollodorus

    'Object' is perhaps a metaphorical expression in this context, as in 'object of thought'. Read Augustine on Intelligible Objects.
  • Apollodorus
    3.4k


    Yes. I meant that people often conceive of Plato's ideas as some kind of mental "objects" when in fact they are part of the subject. Though not the individual subject but the Cosmic Intellect or "Mind of God".
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    There's a reason we have the word "know" and use it sometimes rather than "belief". Mandating that we not do so decreases the power of English.Banno
    It's surely informative. If I bought a book from you titled knowledge I would anticipate anything I found in it to correspond to the facts, but if you wanted to guarantee it was free from unknown errors; I wouldn't expect to pay extra. Because your definition doesn't account for them to be there, so there removal must be costless.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    The thing about truth is that it doesn't matter who knows it or whether or not it is known "subjectively". Reality even moreso (whether or not a specific aspect of it is subjectively encountered). "Subjectivity" is meant to be kept to oneself ... as its private contents rarely hold up to public examination (e.g. fantasy, faith, idealism, mysticism, woo-of-the-gaps, etc).
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    I meant that people often conceive of Plato's ideas as some kind of mental "objects" when in fact they are part of the subject.Apollodorus

    Ideas transcend the subject-object distinction, in that they’re neither ‘in the word’ nor ‘in the mind’ but are facets of the intelligible nature of reality, structures of thought. Not private or personal thinking but the way the mind operates on a more general, inter-subjective level.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    How do we know this is the case?
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    Can science answer many of the questions philosophy asks?

    No, science cannot answer any philosophical questions. The sciences are (very roughly) intellectual disciplines that pursue the discovery of empirical truths and, where possible, laws of nature in their several domains, and the construction of empirical theories that explain them.

    The questions of philosophy are not empirical questions, but conceptual and axiological ones. Scientific truths are to be attained by the employment of our conceptual network, the conceptual scheme articulated in our language (including, of course, the technical language of a given science). But one should not confuse the catch with the net.
    Peter Hacker



    How do we know this is the case?180 Proof

    Through reflection on the nature of knowing - which is the basic task of self-knowledge. That is where philosophy differs profoundly from science. Science always has an object in view, as the above quote says. Philosophy is much nearer to 'now, why do I think that?' It can also be very rigorous, but it's rigorous in a different and even more difficult way than science, because of the intangibility of the subject matter.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Yes, so I thought, we do not know this is the case. Only that there's a terminal regress to our thinking – a gap which needs to be filled (somehow) by ... :roll:
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    mind the woo :chin:
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    There's that saying described as 'thinking outside the square'. The idea behind that comes from a puzzle, whereby you need to draw a straight line through a grid of dots without lifting your pencil. It turns out that the only way it can be done is by extending one of the lines beyond the grid of dots - 'outside the square'.

    1*MxdRC8NvdIcxq38KSj7jiw.png

    By analogy, this is why we have to be willing to consider metaphysics, which are 'outside the square' of what can be objectively known.

    That is in keeping with classical philosophy which always admitted ‘reasonable surmise’ as part of its reckonings. But in much of modern philosophy the naturalist attitude is taken for granted, not seeing how this limits the scope of philosophical conceivability to what is 'inside the square', what can be definitely known by means of sense and science.

    Not that thinking ‘outside the square’ is venturing into completely unknown territory, it has been imaginatively mapped and charted by philosophers from many traditions. But I think we have to open to those perspectives to connect the dots, as it were.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    An argument for more woo.
    What is woo, anyway? Whence the term? I googled it and got

    She want a Woo nigga
    She wanna fuck with the Woo
    She wanna fuck with the Woo
    She wanna fuck with a Woo…

    Or this.
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    How is it possible to compete against such soaring philosophical rhetoric? Obviously I’m outmatched.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    One salient fact about your square example is that there is a criteria for success.

    How is it possible to compete against such soaring philosophical rhetoric? Obviously I’m outmatched.Wayfarer

    Oh, indeed. Apparently Woo is a philosophical street gang from New York.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.