The standard, common sense understanding. — Michael
It's better to let go of this constraint and simply use the word knowledge as we tend to do in ordinary life, which usually does not pose much problems in discussion, outside of specific cases like this. — Manuel
You should read Philosophical Investigations. — Michael
The thing is that ordinary use varies, and there is a sense of knowledge that answers the JTB criteria. The truth criterion is justified by locutions such as "I thought I knew that P, but I was wrong" (i.e. I didn't actually know that P). Or "A thinks that she knows that P, but she is mistaken." — SophistiCat
But I agree that JTB picks out at best some, but not all ordinary senses of knowledge. — SophistiCat
:up:Gettier is mistaken in thinking he has found a failure in our understanding of knowledge. He has discovered fallibility. — unenlightened
:up: :up: (I've recommended TMF do so but he seems incorrigibly stubborn when it comes to Witty.)↪TheMadFool You should read Philosophical Investigations — Michael
Martin Rees is wrong (or just joking). "We make good estimates ..." far more often parochially with ad hoc heuristics (i.e. trial and error correlations) than we do generally with algorithmic calculi (i.e. soundly inferred causal relationships), the latter of which "Newton's laws" – physical laws being nothing more than invariant properties of fallible (defeasible) theoretical models which explain physical regularities – consist.Intriguingly, Martin Rees claims that Newton's laws are physically hardwired in our brains. How else do we make good estimates on what we can handle, physically, and what we can't. — TheMadFool
If a calculator tells me that the answer to 123 × 123 = 15,129 then I am justified in believing that 123 × 123 = 15,129. — Michael
one can believe one is justified by X in believing Z when one is not, because X is false. — unenlightened
I am justified in believing that they are 18 and so that I am allowed to sell them alcohol. — Michael
You will claim to know that they are 18, and you will be wrong, but justified in thinking you are right. — unenlightened
You are confusing what is a reasonable justification with what is a true justification.
which in your case is that the justification is a "true" justification. — Michael
Martin Rees is wrong (or just joking). "We make good estimates ..." far more often parochiallly with ad hoc heuristics (i.e. trial and error correlations) than we do generally with algorithmic calculi (i.e. soundly inferred causal relationships), the latter of which "Newton's laws" – physical laws being nothing more than invariant properties of fallible (defeasible) theoretical models which explain physical regularities – consist. — 180 Proof
Not having put out milk last full moon doesn't justify a belief that fairies exist and cursed his cabbages.
Whereas seeing something that looks like a cow in his field may justify his belief that there is a cow in his field. — Michael
If the cowishly shaped cloth is a cow then there is a cow in my field, therefore if I can infer that the cowishly shaped cloth is a cow given the evidence then I can infer that there is a cow in my field given the evidence. — Michael
in this example — Janus
Why is this so hard for some of you to grasp? Did I miss something? — I like sushi
it's just a definition of knowledge. — Janus
There is considerable disagreement among epistemologists concerning what the relevant sort of justification here consists in.
It is worth noting that one might distinguish between two importantly different notions of justification, standardly referred to as “propositional justification” and “doxastic justification”.
The precise relation between propositional and doxastic justification is subject to controversy, but it is uncontroversial that the two notions can come apart.
Something’s truth does not require that anyone can know or prove that it is true.
Knowledge is a kind of relationship with the truth—to know something is to have a certain kind of access to a fact.
The belief condition is only slightly more controversial than the truth condition. The general idea behind the belief condition is that you can only know what you believe. Failing to believe something precludes knowing it.
I'm with TMF; in this example there is no problem for JTB. The belief that there is a cow on his field is not specific enough. It's a fudge; what the farmer actually believes is that there is a cow in his field at the location of the cow-shaped cloth, so his belief, adequately specified, is false. — Janus
That the person's age is under 18 in reality seems to be of little concern to the definition of knowledge - knowledge can be faulty. — I like sushi
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