that it is is actually true is unknown to us and always will be — Isaac
I think that we do know things like that 2+2=4; that this sentence is in English; that you have some expertise in neural science. And since we know them, I think we can conclude that they are true. — Banno
Rather that thinking of knowing as a mental state, with the implied privacy, think of it as a public commitment. So if we (not I) do not know that this thread is in English, we have no basis for continuing. Knowledge as shared truths... — Banno
Intriguing to say the least, no (scientific) hypothesis can be justified as truth and yet we do believe them to be so. — Agent Smith
What it fails to show is that it must be. — Isaac
Again, you're just showing that "I know X" could be of a form similar to "the grass is green" where we could look to some empirical fact to show it's truth. You're not showing anywhere that is must be of that sort. — Isaac
It's perfectly plausible that we use the past tense of 'to know' to reference the relationship between our previous state of mind and out current beliefs about the state of the world, and the present tense to reference the relationship between our current state of mind and our current beliefs about that state of the world. — Isaac
The use of some perspective other than our own as the 'reality' we are talking about the confidence we have in our beliefs matching doesn't mean we always must use that perspective in all cases, only that we can. — Isaac
If there isn't a bus and you say "there's a bus" then what you say is false. — Michael
But what's wrong with saying something false? — Isaac
This is only true if "justification" means establishing the truth of an assertion without doubt, which can't be done. — T Clark
I don't understand what tense has to do with it. In the general form we're discussing the meaning of the noun "knowledge" which obviously has no tense. The proposed definition is "a justified true belief". We can then use tense to talk about having (or not having) a justified true belief or having had (or not having had) a justified true belief, and so on, but grammatical tense has no bearing on the meaning of the noun. — Michael
We can only evaluate a claim as true or not true based on the facts that are currently available to us...not in an absolute sense, because we don't know if we have all the facts needed to make such an absolute evaluation.
So when a claim is true, it means that it is Only Currently true based on the limited available facts we have. — Nickolasgaspar
-Correct, being reasonable and accepting the current facts has nothing to do with the actual True statement. BUT again, the time to depart from our Default Position is ONLY after we have available facts to support our position.but whether or not he committed the crime has nothing to do with the evidence available to jury and everything to do with historical events that actually happened. — Michael
In both cases(jury trial knowledge evaluation) we can never be absolutely sure and this is why in the case of the jury...the members don't choose between guilty and innocent! Like with every application of the Null Hypothesis, Significant findings are demanded in order to departs from the normal risk free position. So its always guilty/not guilty or true/not true without absolute convictions. — Nickolasgaspar
We need to acknowledge that our Knowledge and truth claims are limited by our nature, our methods and the rules of Logic. — Nickolasgaspar
A claim is accepted as knowledge when it is in agreement with available facts and carries an instrumental value. — Nickolasgaspar
We can only evaluate a claim as true or not true based on the facts that are currently available to us...not in an absolute sense, because we don't know if we have all the facts needed to make such an absolute evaluation. — Nickolasgaspar
I think the notion of truth plays a far more important place in keeping things coherent and consistent, than does knowledge. For example i can't see how we might understand error without having the truth and falsehood; nor could we differentiate what we know from what we merely believe. — Banno
Yes, our truth claims are limited by our nature, but truth itself isn't. Either there is an apple in the bag or there isn't, regardless of whatever I claim. . — Michael
Correct but we don't know that.We can only arrive to a conclusion based on available facts. So our statements are evaluated as true or not true based on those facts. — Nickolasgaspar
Correct, but again our evaluation can only be made based on the available facts either we are happy or not. — Nickolasgaspar
I don't know what you mean by "must" here. I'm not saying that the word "knowledge" must mean this; I'm only saying that the word knowledge does mean this. — Michael
We can then use tense to talk about having (or not having) a justified true belief or having had (or not having had) a justified true belief, and so on, but grammatical tense has no bearing on the meaning of the noun. — Michael
why do you believe that a phrase like "I know that there is an apple in the bag" doesn't use this perspective but that a phrase like "there is an apple in the bag" does? If we just use your meaning-as-use approach then we will say that both assertions are only ever used when we believe that there is an apple in the bag, so then both knowing that there is an apple in the bag and there being an apple in the bag is just a matter of belief? — Michael
The former is about my state of mind, the latter about the state of the world. — Isaac
Well by definition it can be. The utilization of that guess and the successful yielding of results alone render it" knowledge". Unsystematic Empirical Knowledge is mostly the result of guessing and unconscious or conscious empirical testing.A random guess may be in agreement with facts, it may have instrumental value, but it is not knowledge. — hypericin
Same error here(absolutism). Knowledge and truth are not(always) the same thing.If we cannot evaluate truth in an absolute sense, then we cannot evaluate knowledge either. — hypericin
-Correct as I already said, knowledge is nothing more than an evaluation term. Its a status we apply on claims that are in agreement with currently available facts.We can only claim that something does or does not hold the status of knowledge. — hypericin
-I will only change the term "truths" with "facts."What is or is not considered knowledge changes over time, because our body of currently accepted truths, as well as the justifications we consider legitimate, change over time. — hypericin
I know. The point I am making is that the below are two different claims that you are conflating:
1. The statement has been evaluated as true
2. The statement is true — Michael
-No my arguements have nothing to do with this strawman. Pls reread my posts more carefully.You argue for the former and conclude the latter which is a non sequitur. — Michael
we can understand "I know that the grass is green" as a combination of "I believe that the grass is green" (a statement about my state of mind) and "the grass is green" (a statement about the state of the world). — Michael
perhaps this is better understood in the third person: "John knows that the grass is green." The statement isn't about me or my beliefs (even if my beliefs motivate the assertion) — Michael
No I am not. My whole argument is to distinguish true statements from Absolute truth.
I pointed out that true statements (based on facts) are reasonable but not necessarily absolute truths.
Reasonableness(accepting a claim to be true based on current facts) and Absolute Truthiness are two different things. — Nickolasgaspar
My answer is the same answer that you gave: the latter is about my state of mind, the former about the state of the world. — Michael
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