You left out the most important part - justification. Knowledge is information adequately justified for it's intended use. Different uses required different levels of justification. No knowledge can be absolutely certain. — T Clark
By "correct" do you mean "true"? Because then this very sentence accepts that there is such a thing as truth which is independent of whatever we believe, so you appear to be contradicting yourself. — Michael
Truth is also important. If John claims to know that the answer to the equation is 5 and Jane claims to know that the answer to the equation is 6 then at least one of them is wrong in their claim of knowledge. They can't both know the answer and have different answers. — Michael
Say I have data chemical laboratory analysis data measurements for 100 water samples for 10 chemical constituents. So I have a 10 x 100 table of data. Is it true? What does that even mean? — T Clark
Of course truth is important, but if it turns out later something I know is wrong, it doesn't stop being knowledge somehow retroactively. — T Clark
If the first cell says that there is iron in the first sample of water but there isn't iron in the first sample of water then the data in the first cell is false, and if there is iron in the first sample of water then the data in the first cell is true. — Michael
It doesn't stop being knowledge; it was never knowledge in the first place. Just because you claim to know the answer doesn't mean you do, regardless of how convinced and justified you are. — Michael
This is why people dismiss philosophy as useless. Silly arguments about abstract ideas that have nothing useful to say about how to get along. — T Clark
If I'm going to dig a hole in my yard, it's important that I know if there are buried gas pipes in that location — T Clark
If I'm going to dig a hole in my yard, it's important that I know if there are buried gas pipes in that location — T Clark
I don't understand this at all. You claim that there is an apple in the bag. We open the bag to find an orange. It didn't stop being an apple when we opened the bag; it just never was an apple. — Michael
You might have thought you knew, but you didn't, because they weren't (only) where you believed them to be. — Michael
because we use the phrase "the grass is green" when we believe that the grass is green — Michael
You claim that there is an apple in the bag. We open the bag to find an orange. It didn't stop being an apple when we opened the bag; it just never was an apple. — Michael
If John claims to know that the answer to the equation is 5 and Jane claims to know that the answer to the equation is 6 then at least one of them is wrong in their claim of knowledge. They can't both know the answer and yet have different answers. — Michael
And using this example; assume you start digging and break a gas pipe. You wouldn't say "I knew where all the gas pipes were, but I was wrong"; you would say "I didn't know where all the gas pipes were." — Michael
My argument is to look to the use of the term. It's used (present tense) in situations where the justifications are of a sufficient level. It's not reserved for use only when X is true. It's used in the past tense comparing to what we currently believe. Again, truth is not referenced at all. — Isaac
And using this example; assume you start digging and break a gas pipe. You wouldn't say "I knew where all the gas pipes were, but I was wrong"; you would say "I didn't know where all the gas pipes were." — Michael
Almost every competent English speaker will agree with this. Our understanding of the word "knowledge" is that it includes the condition of truth. — Michael
That's true of everything we say. I say "the grass is green" when I believe (with justification) that the grass is green. I say "the defendant is guilty" when I believe (with justification) that the defendant is guilty. It doesn't then follow that X being true isn't the truthmaker. — Michael
. I understand that people do sometimes ruminate over basic life decisions. But I don't consider that kind of quotidian decision making (or lack thereof) philosophy. It may be how philosophy begins and then from it an ontology and epistemology is gradually built. — Tom Storm
What about your own personal philosophy? Not sure if you have one? — Joshs
For others the best way to articulate and grow their personal philosophy may be through the language of music , poetry, dance, painting , running a business , doing science or digging ditches. — Joshs
So, like our apple, proper justification (relative to the context) is the truthmaker of "I know X". If it turns out that (like our apple not being there) that I don't have proper justification for believing X, then the proposition "I know X" is false. — Isaac
So we thought we knew, but we were mistaken. — Banno
So to properly use the word knowledge, the public rule governing it's proper use (the rule which we reference to say what it 'means') cannot use the concept of what is 'actually true' since no-one in the public rule-making community has this information. It can only use what they think is true. But that (as above) already constitutes that which is well-justified - and being well-justified is already one of the criteria for 'knowledge' under JTB. — Isaac
While you were away, a thief broke into your car, and replaced it with a bag of oranges. Later, you claim, "I know I have a bag of apples in the car". By every standard you are perfectly justified in believing so. And yet, you do not know it, because the truth is, you have a bag of oranges. — hypericin
There are plenty of examples of well justified falsehoods, like the one I gave above. — hypericin
By your logic, the use of the everyday word 'true' would be impossible, since no one has access to the truth. — hypericin
The way out is simple: every "I know", every "this is true", is a claim to knowledge and truth. We don't need direct access to the truth to make claims to it. — hypericin
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