I cannot give you a thorough justification of anything. — Manuel
That's surely JTB and knowledge for that time. We would not call it knowledge today. — Manuel
But what about our beliefs now? They could be rendered false in a few decades. So we would have no knowledge. — Manuel
Well, then I don't have much reason to believe your statement and neither do you. — Artemis
Why in the world would that be JTB? It's not true and it's not justified. Just because someone believes their beliefs to be true and justified doesn't make it so. — Artemis
Yep — Artemis
It would have been knowledge for them, I don't see why not. — Manuel
If you don't have any recourse for better data, I don't see why you wouldn't have beliefs you take to be true. What's the alternative? Have no beliefs? That's just not possible. — Manuel
That makes no sense at all. — Manuel
Subjective experiences are not evidential, not admissible in the Court of Mikey as evidence; the only evidence which is admissible is objective in nature, and perceptible by those other than the claimant.
— Michael Zwingli
I agree.
Many people do not. You hear people speaking of "my truth" or "it's true to me" all the time. Yeah, such statements aren't suitable for logic, given the context. But people will continue to use it as evidence. — Manuel
Because it isn't true. The earth is not actually the center of the universe and nothing they believe would make it so. — Artemis
Sure it does. Once you realize that belief is not the same as knowledge. Belief is just one of the three components of knowledge. It is necessary but not sufficient. — Artemis
So which is it? Do you agree or disagree that truth is relative? — Artemis
We can say that now. Back then they could not. It was the best theory they had for the time and not an unreasonable one at that, to me anyway. What would you expect them to say, "I believe the Earth is the center of the universe, but it is not true." — Manuel
If a person claims to use personal experience as an argument for a truth claim about the world, I wouldn't accept it. But I cannot deny to such people that the experience they had is not true, if they limit it to experience alone, I don't have a problem.
Truths about the world are relative in a very different sense than personal truths. — Manuel
If someone took LSD and told you they saw a pink, invisible unicorn in your house, you can BOTH acknowledge that they TRULY had this mental experience AND that there is no actual pink, invisible unicorn. — Artemis
They do know that they had an experience of a pink, invisible unicorn. They do not know that there IS a pink, invisible unicorn. — Artemis
I don't see what is gained by insisting that knowledge must be thought of as so and so. The way I see it if that if we continue insisting on these criteria, we face the prospects of saying "We never had any knowledge of anything ever", because the details will change — Manuel
I think it is more helpful to keep the distinction between mind-independent and mind-depedent instead of knowledge — Manuel
Belief is rather English specific, it has strong religious connotations. — Manuel
If you want to think of knowledge in this way, because it's useful to you, then by all means keep using it. — Manuel
the conversation is not going to go anywhere useful... up until the point of course we recognize our verbal misunderstanding, chuckle a bit about how silly we sounded, and THEN continue talking with a shared vocabulary. — Artemis
And yeah, lots of what we think we know is going to be proven outright wrong or tweaked along the way someday. You seem... more uncomfortable with that notion than you seem to have an actual reasons to dispute it? But discomfort isn't a good reason to discount something. — Artemis
then that alone doesn't change the validity of our definitions thereof. That is, after all, why languages borrow from another: to fill gaps and needs in their own language. — Artemis
Ah, the retreat back to relativism. "You do you" etc. But the slippery slope you mentioned earlier lies precisely IN relativism. Relativism inexorably leads down to nobody being able to make any truth claims or claims at all without getting themselves endlessly riddled in self-contradictions. — Artemis
When does a fact establish itself as knowledge? More precisely, if knowledge is Justified-True-Belief, then how do facts fit into such a conceptual scheme for or of knowledge? — Shawn
I want to say that novelists, historians and philosophers can be very knowledgeable, as they are, without arbitrarily limiting the use of the word "knowledge" to mean, what exists absent us. — Manuel
First of all, philosophers spend a great deal of time trying to get their vocabulary right. I don't even understand how you (as someone who seems to have spent some time in academia) would come to dismiss the need for a clear and precise vocabulary in philosophy. Doesn't mean you can't revise the vocabulary, but you absolutely must be clear about what you're saying. — Artemis
Additionally, an idea or a thought is not the same as a belief. You don't believe all the thoughts and ideas you have. Belief is a kind of thought or idea, namely one you think is true.
You can't both agree that we should be clear whether we are speaking of cats or pandas AND dismiss the need to be clear what we mean by "knowledge" or any other term in philosophy. — Artemis
If these terms are so well defined, why the heck do people argue about them all the time? Do you see physicists arguing about what energy means or what inertia means? — Manuel
I didn't say that an idea or though is the same as belief, I said it could be substituted for the term idea or thought. — Manuel
I don't have an obligation to entertain you, if you don't find my answers satisfying, that's your problem, not mine.
I don't find your arguments persuasive on this topic.
Go ahead and define these terms as you wish. I've had plenty of interesting conversations here with all kinds of people. But it's not going to please or be instructive to everybody, that's par for the course — Manuel
facts are true — Banno
First of all: yes, even physicists and other scientists argue about terminology.
Second of all: Why? because ideas are expressed through terms and most philosophers are aware that we must get the vocabulary right in order to get the ideas right... otherwise they wouldn't bother arguing about them. — Artemis
I'm not actually trying to be dismissive or negative, though of course criticism almost invariably comes across as such. Instead, I'm just stating a fact: if you don't understand the terms, then of course you can't be persuaded by the argument, because you can't understand the argument without understanding the terms. That's --oh the irony!-- both the impediment to you understanding me as well as the core issue I'm trying to explain. C'est la vie.
Oh well. You can lead a horse to water, as they say... someday, when you've wrapped your head around the basics, let me know! Then I'd be interested to see if you have some better arguments for your critiques of JTB. — Artemis
if you don't understand the terms, then of course you can't be persuaded by the argument, because you can't understand the argument without understanding the terms. — Artemis
That which is true, in respect of being true, is always universally and necessarily true. — tim wood
Alternate spelling perfect or pluperfect?Even my Shorter OED lists five differing uses for "Fact". — Banno
I give up; what am I missing? In what respect is something that is true, not true?But I'm concerned for you, if you think "That which is true, in respect of being true, is always universally and necessarily true". — Banno
But I'm concerned for you, if you think "That which is true, in respect of being true, is always universally and necessarily true".
— Banno
I give up; what am I missing? In what respect is something that is true, not true? — tim wood
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