So where are we left with your JTB on my view? Not in a very good place. Facts don’t matter, truth is meaningless, and belief is an aside. You may not wish to get me started on justification. — Ennui Elucidator
Facts are independent of a knower, knowledge, on the other hand, is not. — TheMadFool
Justification strikes me as an ethical evaluation, i.e. that given a particular set of circumstances (both with respect to X and the way in which we have decided X is acceptably established as true), one should believe X. So rather than doing the work of establishing knowledge from JTB by way of internal evaluation (“Do I have sufficient warrant to believe X” or “Do I have sufficient warrant to believe X is true?’), justification is actually the way in which we evaluate the claims of other people’s claims to knowledge. The reason that this distinction is important is because we simultaneously 1) recognize (at least currently) that belief formation is not necessarily (or perhaps even a little bit) the result of some higher order epistemic evaluation that compels belief and 2) demand that the only warrant for belief is higher order epistemic evaluation. This highlights a feature of justification - that it is a social phenomenon about mental coercion rather than an effort at accurate description about why an individual assents to a particular belief. — Ennui Elucidator
Understanding that facts are true is part of learning the language game around facts and truth. — Banno
It is undeniable that there is uncertainty in everything we call a fact. — T Clark
So, facts exist, as in, independently, out there somewhere, waiting to be discovered? — Shawn
What would the alternative be? We make shit up? :chin: — TheMadFool
What would the alternative be? We make shit up? :chin:
— TheMadFool
No, I mean that if we assume that truth is something up for debate, then are there possibly differing senses of facts? — Shawn
Might leave you to think on that. Did you mean "truth-apt" or "true"? — Banno
Truth-apt is capable of being either true or false. — Banno
Can one have beliefs that are not just not true, but not even able to be true or false? — Banno
Indeed, the word "fact" seems to be an endorsement of the correspondence theory of truth. — TheMadFool
Indeed, the word "fact" seems to be an endorsement of the correspondence theory of truth.
— TheMadFool
And seemingly, this is what Banno has been professing as the way to determine an utterance being a fact from a proposition... — Shawn
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