According to the knowability principle, if a proposition is true then it is knowable. Therefore, if a proposition is not knowable then it is not true. — Michael
Isn't the unknown truth "p & ~Kp" both knowable and unknowable, according to the argument? — Luke
However, it can be shown independently that it is impossible to know this conjunction. Line 3 is false. — 2. The Paradox of Knowability - SEP
No. Line 3 of the SEP proof asserts that "p & ~Kp" is knowable, i.e., "<>K(p & ~Kp)". "<>K(p & ~Kp)" is then subsequently proved to be false. Therefore "p & ~Kp" is not knowable. — Andrew M
Line 9 contradicts line 3. So a contradiction follows from KP and NonO. — 2. The Paradox of Knowability - SEP
In that case there would be no contradiction, but as the SEP proof asserts:
Line 9 contradicts line 3. So a contradiction follows from KP and NonO.
— 2. The Paradox of Knowability - SEP — Luke
But there is no contradiction unless “p & ~Kp” is both knowable and unknowable. — Luke
The reason is that knowing "p & ~Kp" would entail knowing p and also not knowing p which is impossible.. — Andrew M
Is the truth of the proposition that there are unknowable propositions itself unknowable? We might want to say that it is, because if there are unknowable propositions then we could never know there are, just because they are unknowable.
But then it would follow that there is at least one unknowable truth, that it is unknowable as to whether there are unknowable truths; and that is a contradiction, because it would also follow that we know that there is at least one unknowable truth. — Janus
Fitch's paradox shows that a contradiction follows from KP and NonO. — Andrew M
Line 9 contradicts line 3. So a contradiction follows from KP and NonO. — 2. The Paradox of Knowability - SEP
That still seems wrong to me. The proposition is an assumption or stipulation: let's assume or stipulate that p and that we don't know p. — Janus
There doesn't seem to be any problem with that until what seems like the absurd idea of "knowing" (the truth of, presumably) that proposition is introduced. — Janus
Timothy Williamson (2000b) says the knowability paradox is not a paradox; it’s an “embarrassment”––an embarrassment to various brands of antirealism that have long overlooked a simple counterexample. — Fitch’s Paradox of Knowability - SEP
The alternative I proposed:
Is the truth of the proposition that there are unknowable propositions itself unknowable? We might want to say that it is, because if there are unknowable propositions then we could never know there are, just because they are unknowable.
But then it would follow that there is at least one unknowable truth, that it is unknowable as to whether there are unknowable truths; and that is a contradiction, because it would also follow that we know that there is at least one unknowable truth.
— Janus
Does seem to show that we do know that there is at least one unknowable truth; that it is unknowable as to whether there are unknowable truths, although I was wrong above to say that is a contradiction, because we are not knowing an unknowable truth but the knowable truth that there is at least one unknowable truth. — Janus
That's the contradiction. However it's not true that a proposition can be both knowable and unknowable is it? — Andrew M
Second, if we didn't have that proof (or others that I may not be aware of), then we wouldn't know whether there were unknowable truths or not. — Andrew M
Hence, the statement "p is an unknown truth" cannot be both known and true at the same time. Therefore, if all truths are knowable, the set of "all truths" must not include any of the form "something is an unknown truth"; thus there must be no unknown truths, and thus all truths must be known. — Fitch's paradox of knowability
But if there were no unknown truths, wouldn't it then follow that there would be no unknowable truths? — Janus
In any case, that is not how the argument gets from unknown to unknowable is it? — Janus
Possibly. What's your reasoning? — Luke
The move from unknown to unknowable is given in the "independent result" in lines 4-9 of the SEP proof. The logic of that reductio argument is beyond my understanding, and I would welcome someone to explain it. However, I don't dispute its conclusion. — Luke
Yeah, I don't comprehend it either, as I said, but I also accept the conclusion (although not on account of the "paradox") that there must be unknowable truths. — Janus
That's the contradiction. However it's not true that a proposition can be both knowable and unknowable is it?
— Andrew M
Right, but neither should the contradiction imply that “p & ~Kp” is necessarily unknowable. — Luke
I still cannot get the move from unknown truth to unknowable truth in the argument. — Janus
That may be true, but if it is unknowable as to whether there are unknowable truths, which seems easy enough to show, ... — Janus
According to the knowability principle, a statement is true if it can be known to be true, — Michael
It's thus true that there's milk in the fridge and no-one knows there is.
That true statement is unknowable. Why? Because anyone coming to know that there's milk in the fridge (say, by looking) would render the statement false (since the second conjunct would be false). The statement doesn't change from an unknown truth to a known truth. It changes from an unknown truth to a known falsity. — Andrew M
Suppose there is milk in the fridge and no-one knows there is.
It's thus true that there's milk in the fridge and no-one knows there is.
That true statement is unknowable. Why? Because anyone coming to know that there's milk in the fridge (say, by looking) would render the statement false (since the second conjunct would be false). The statement doesn't change from an unknown truth to a known truth. — Andrew M
Therefore, the starting suppositions make it impossible for an unknown truth to become a known truth. — Luke
But if "p & ~Kp" cannot possibly change from being unknown to being known, then of course it is unknowable: it's a rigged game from the outset. — Luke
"There are 163 coins in the jar" was an unknown truth before someone counted, and then it became a known truth. — Michael
I don't know what you mean by it being "rigged". It just shows that the knowability principle is wrong. Some truths are, in fact, unknowable. — Michael
But if you accept that there are unknowable truths then you're not in any difficulty. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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