A subject S knows that a proposition P is true if and only if:
P is true, and
S believes that P is true, and
S is justified in believing that P is true
An analysis of knowledge is either an analysis of what the word 'knowledge' means - how we use the word, or an analysis of what the word ought to mean - how it would make most sense in some particular context, to use it. — Isaac
In every day use, knowledge is most often simply a category of belief we have a high confidence in — Isaac
What, if anything, is the underlying logic? This is the task of philosophy as I see it, in answering these "what is" questions. — hypericin
you might claim to know something. But if you had said, "I know my keys are around here somewhere", I can ask, "In retrospect, did you really know it?" — hypericin
If in fact the keys were in the car, you did not know it. — hypericin
Is this a fair observation? — Tom Storm
What if there isn't an 'underlying logic'? I mean there's no intrinsic reason why there need be. what if 'know' as in "I know my keys are around here somewhere!", is different in meaning to 'know' as in "she knew where her keys were". — Isaac
The word 'know' would never be used if used according only to the principle of true facts with true premises. — Isaac
When I claim "I know the pub is at the end of the road" I simply mean that if you walk to the end of the road, you will find the pub there. So if the pub I thought was there had been knocked down, but later replaced by another, I don't see a problem with saying that I 'knew' there was a pub at the end of the road, since, if you walk to the end of the road, you will, indeed, find a pub there. — Isaac
n ordinary life, epistemology is of little consequence - in picking a partner, choosing a home or selecting a car, working out what university degree to do, or which job to take, what shopping to buy - we do not worry about the problem of induction, or the correspondence theory of truth, or philosophy in general. — Tom Storm
I completely disagree. — hypericin
It is what makes decisions so hard. — hypericin
If philosophy were a quaint exercise confined to certain abstract questions, it would be utterly uninteresting. — hypericin
Hmm, maybe it is the fact that I have always been philosophically inclined that has made these kind of decisions nightmarishly hard for me!I've never found such decisions hard at all. — Tom Storm
you are confusing truth condition with condition of use. The truth condition of "to know" is nontrivial and very debatable. But the condition of use is both variable between people, and might be as simple as a feeling of confidence that something is so. These are totally disjoint things — hypericin
Consider, we are in a city we haven't been to in 10 years. You say "I know there is pub at the end of the road." We go to the end of the road. There is a pub with signs of fresh construction, and a "grand opening" sign. You say, "I knew it!". This would be a joke. Because, while there is in fact a pub at the end of the road, you absolutely did not know it. — hypericin
In every day use, knowledge is most often simply a category of belief we have a high confidence in - "I know my keys are around here somewhere!" — Isaac
But this does not cut it, even by the standards of every day use. Sure, if you have a strong conviction, you might claim to know something. But if you had said, "I know my keys are around here somewhere", I can ask, "In retrospect, did you really know it?"
If in fact the keys were in the car, you did not know it.
If you knew it because you are a Pisces, you did not know it, even if they were around here somewhere, and you are in fact a Pisces.
If you knew it because you remember leaving them on a table, when in fact that memory was from yesterday, but they did fall out of your pocket here anyway, you did not know it. — hypericin
The wiki article mentions an early response to this problem, which is also my response: you just have to amend "knowledge is justified true belief" with a condition which rules out false premises: say, "knowledge is true belief justified with true premises". — hypericin
I can't think of any Gettier Problem which survives this kind of analysis, or any other counterexample to:
Knowledge is true belief justified by true premises. — hypericin
In ordinary life, epistemology is of little consequence - in picking a partner, choosing a home or selecting a car, working out what university degree to do, or which job to take, what shopping to buy - we do not worry about the problem of induction, or the correspondence theory of truth, or philosophy in general. — Tom Storm
You are absolutely confusing them.I'm not 'confusing' them, I'm arguing that they amount to the same thing. — Isaac
But, using this analysis, "I know where my hat is", when used to describe a high degree of confidence in my belief about the whereabouts of my hat, is exactly the right use of the term, and so it is true that "I know where my hat is", because I used the term correctly. Even if my hat turns out not to be there. — Isaac
Ah, you've misunderstood my example (or I've been unclear). In your example, I couldn't possibly justify my statement because I'd never been to the city before. — Isaac
Consider, we are in a city we haven't been to in 10 years — hypericin
But, using this analysis, "I know where my hat is", when used to describe a high degree of confidence in my belief about the whereabouts of my hat, is exactly the right use of the term, and so it is true that "I know where my hat is", because I used the term correctly. Even if my hat turns out not to be there. — Isaac
Justification for knowing where my keys are is less stringent than that required to make sure the bridge doesn't fall down. — T Clark
What do you mean by the right or correct use of the term? Do you mean appropriate? — Michael
No, I mean 'correct' as in 'to be understood, to make sense'. No different to if I pointed to a tree and said "dog". I'd have just used the wrong word. " Tree" is the correct word.
I'm understood, if I say "I know where my keys are", to be very confident about my belief. I'm not understood to have verified the absolute truth about their location. As such, it seems reasonable to conclude I've used the term correctly, and I do indeed 'know' where my keys are.
The alternative seems really weird to me. That I say "I know where my keys are", I used all the terms correctly, but I don't actually know where my keys are. — Isaac
I can understand you even if what you say is false, so this doesn't work either. — Michael
I don't know what you mean by this. — Michael
That the thing they're referring to isn't a bus. — Michael
What's wrong with using the word 'bus' to refer to something that isn't a bus — Isaac
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