My problem is that I think my assent (provisional or otherwise) adds nothing to the conversation of “is true” because the state-of-affairs is what it is regardless. Do I believe “a fact is true”? Why invest so much emotion or mental energy? I’d go with, “Does acting as if appear to further my agenda more than acting as if not?” — Ennui Elucidator
Facts don’t matter, truth is meaningless, and belief is an aside. — Ennui Elucidator
The price of doubting everything is incoherence. — Banno
Indeed, the word "fact" seems to be an endorsement of the correspondence theory of truth. — TheMadFool
This is not nihilism, it's solipsism. Not the same thing. — T Clark
More precisely, if knowledge is Justified-True-Belief, then how do facts fit into such a conceptual scheme for or of knowledge? — Shawn
epistemological nihilism — Ennui Elucidator
epistemological nihilism makes the claim that no knowledge is possible while solipsism makes the claim that only one thing can be known. — Ennui Elucidator
Where in my writing did I make the claim that something can be known, let alone the claim that only one thing can be known or that the only knowable thing is that my mind exists? — Ennui Elucidator
I long ago came to peace with the idea that non-referential indexicals and other tricks of language account for much of the problem of “my mind” and that my version of “mind” is both constructed and re-constructed so seamlessly that even if I conquered the idea that there was something to “I”, I’d hardly know what it is and would find that anything to be said about it is conjecture. — Ennui Elucidator
Nothing exists but me, and I don't exist either. — T Clark
That would be metaphysics (rather than epistemology) and I don’t talk about such things. — Ennui Elucidator
we shouldn’t confuse acting as if for the sake of utility with either belief or argument. — Ennui Elucidator
not because we know that the Eiffel Tower is in Paris, but because our best information makes it far more likely to find it there (if at all) rather than New York. — Ennui Elucidator
Now you're just playing with language. Knowledge is provisionally verified information. — T Clark
...unconcerned with the “what there is”, rather I am concerned with what is done. — Ennui Elucidator
The object is never accessible or knowable regardless of your metaphysics and so it isn’t helpful as anything besides a linguistic convenience to even make reference to it. — Ennui Elucidator
while totally avoiding objective knowledge — Ennui Elucidator
Imagine you watch the finals in the NBA and team A beats team B. You saw it and reached this conclusion. Unbeknownst to you, what you were watching was a replay of a previos game in which the same team wins (team A) against the same opponent (team B). In the actual finals team A does beat team B, but you were watching a replay, not the actual game. So you had justified true belief, but it wasn't knowledge. — Manuel
Mostly the latter, though. — Artemis
Is my favorite colour knowledge? Does the itch I feel in my arm knowledge? Is alchemy knowledge? Do I know that a comet won't hit me (or anyone) in the head today? — Manuel
I'm familiar with Gettier's work. But as far as I understand it, it really challenges more the concept of justification and notions of absolute and absolutely ascertainable truth. — Artemis
you acknowledge fallibility when asserting knowledge claims. That doesn't mean you don't have strict criteria for "knowledge," but that you may or may not actual know what you think you know. — Artemis
3. I'm not sure what you mean by alchemy. — Artemis
There's a few ways to interpret the paper and much subsequent literature on it. But the title is literally Is Justified True Belief Knowledge? He gives examples with coins and a friend in Barcelona, but I think it is correct in saying that JTB is not knowledge, it's not the rock solid definition as was assumed. Though Russell pointed this out in the 1920's, and was mostly ignored. — Manuel
It's not that we can't speak about knowledge or fallibility, it's just that these words don't have precise meanings. — Manuel
The beliefs that came prior to modern chemistry. Turning lead into gold, life elixir etc. Now considered mostly pseudoscience, though maybe not all of it. — Manuel
Gettier came up with an interesting challenge to naive interpretations of JTB, but the literal title of his paper still doesn't actually dismantle JTB. You'll need to give more arguments than just "well Russell said it too" I'm afraid. — Artemis
Which you still haven't thoroughly justified. — Artemis
"But what does it mean to be justified? And that's a sticky question indeed. — Artemis
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