I've made several accompanied by subsequent argument. You've chosen to neglect all that. — creativesoul
The latest point was that you could not back up your claims about "there's a cow in the field" being justified. — creativesoul
You refuse to answer very basic questions regarding how? Instead, you feign ignorance and distract attention away from your own shortcomings by creating confusion regarding what is meant by the words that you must use in order to make your case. Like your herring a bit red, do you?
You've proven my last point rather nicely. — creativesoul
I'm still willing to see how "there is a cow in the field" satisfies your criterion for what counts as a justified belief. — creativesoul
Valid criticism of my own position works too, but if you do not understand it, then it would be unreasonable of me to expect you to provide such. I'm strongly asserting that it is not justified, and I've offered more than adequate/sufficient subsequent arguments and/or reasoning for that assertion. — creativesoul
So in the case of the farmer's false belief, we could say he is validly justified in believing that there is a cow... — neomac
validly deduce/infer/conclude "there is a cow in the field" from mistaking cloth — creativesoul
There is no deduction or inference or conclusion since these concepts for me apply more appropriately between propositions, not between perceptions and propositions! — neomac
..these cognitive abilities constitute a VALID justification for his perceptual belief (because they are relatively reliable), but not a SOUND justification for his perceptual belief though (because in that specific case they failed). — neomac
There is no deduction or inference or conclusion since these concepts for me apply more appropriately between propositions, not between perceptions and propositions! — neomac
..these cognitive abilities constitute a VALID justification for his perceptual belief (because they are relatively reliable), but not a SOUND justification for his perceptual belief though (because in that specific case they failed). — neomac
Gibberish. One the one hand, you claim there is no inference, deduction, or conclusion possible between mistaking cloth for cow and the assertion "there is a cow in the field", and then call that assertion 'valid' despite just openly admitting that it is not even capable of being so. — creativesoul
Validity and soundness are qualities, characteristics, and/or features of logical arguments, reasoning, and such. — creativesoul
Various attempts have been made in recent years to state necessary and sufficient conditions for someone's knowing a given proposition. The attempts have often been such that they can be stated in a form similar to the following:
(a) S knows that P IFF
1.) P is true,
2.) S believes that P
3.) S is justified in believing that P
For example, Chisholm has held that the following gives the necessary
and sufficient conditions for knowledge:
(b) knows that P IFF
1.) S accepts P
2.) S has adequate evidence for P
3.) P is true.
Ayer has stated the necessary and sufficient conditions for knowledge as
follows
(c) S knows that P IFF
1.) P is true,
2.) S is sure that P is true, and
3.) S has the right to be sure that P is true.
I shall argue that (a) is false in that the conditions stated therein do not constitute a sufficient condition for the truth of the proposition that S knows that P. The same argument will show that (b) and (c) fail if ' has adequate evidence for ' or ' has the right to be sure that ' is substituted for ' is justified in believing that ' throughout.
I shall begin by noting two points. First, in that sense of 'justified ' in which S's being justified in believing P is a necessary condition of S's knowing that P, it is possible for a person to be justified in believing a proposition that is in fact false.
Secondly, for any proposition P, if S is justified in believing P, and P entails Q, and S deduces Q from P and accepts Q as a result of this deduction, then S is justified in believing Q.
"there is a cow in the field" is justified because you equivocate and/or abuse the term "valid". — creativesoul
Still waiting for you to clarify how and why you changed your views or the way you present them. — neomac
I reject the rules of entailment because, as Gettier showed, we can use them to go from a belief that cannot be true to a belief that is. Logical/valid argument/reasoning preserves truth. — creativesoul
Still waiting for you to clarify how and why you changed your views or the way you present them. — neomac
This is a VALID DEDUCTION and the CONCLUSION IS TRUE, yet BOTH PREMISES ARE FALSE. — neomac
Valid deductions preserve truth — neomac
Either it's not a valid deduction or valid deductions do not preserve truth. — creativesoul
The preservation of truth includes the preservation of falsity. — creativesoul
The preservation of truth includes the preservation of falsity. — creativesoul — creativesoul
You are evidently confused. In the quoted claims of mine the word "valid" is taken as qualifying "justification" (not "assertion")How exactly is "there is a cow in the field" valid? — creativesoul
Evidently, the above is not true in standard formal logic. My error. Good thing none of my objections to Gettier require it to be. — creativesoul
Here I disagree. I reject the rules of entailment because, as Gettier showed, we can use them to go from a belief that cannot be true to a belief that is. Logical/valid argument/reasoning preserves truth. The rules of entailment do not. If the preservation of truth is a requirement of valid, coherent, and/or logical reasoning, then the rules of 'logical' entailment fail to satisfy that standard. — creativesoul
your issue isn't with entailment but with "justificatory closure". — Michael
1. If I was born in France then I was not born in Germany
2. You are justified in believing that I was born in France
3. Therefore, you are justified in believing that I was not born in Germany
Trying to argue that (1) is false if I was not born in France seems unreasonable. Maybe you mean to argue that (3) is an invalid inference? If so then your issue isn't with entailment but with "justificatory closure".
Although I would disagree with you. (3) appears a valid inference to me. Thalburg's objection doesn't apply to this example given that being born in France and being born in Germany are mutually exclusive, and so the conjunction "I was born in France and not born in Germany" is not less likely than the singular "I was born in France". — Michael
If you were not born in Germany for any other reason than being born in France, then S's belief would be justified, valid, and false. — creativesoul
S's belief is not just that you were born in Germany. It is that you were not born in Germany because you were born in France.
That is not true. — creativesoul
. Your argument seems to be that if I believe a conjunction then I don't believe each of its parts, which is false — Michael
1. If I was born in France then I was not born in Germany
2. You are justified in believing that I was born in France
3. Therefore, you are justified in believing that I was not born in Germany — Michael
Beliefs about one thing entail beliefs about another. I believe that Joe Biden is President. I believe that only one person is President. I believe that Donald Trump isn't President. I believe that Barack Obama isn't President. — Michael
People believe more than one thing. Beliefs about one thing entail beliefs about another. I believe that Joe Biden is President. I believe that only one person is President. I believe that Donald Trump isn't President. I believe that Barack Obama isn't President. I believe that creativesoul isn't President. I believe that an emu isn't President. And so on. — Michael
You want to rephrase all these beliefs as being "I believe that an emu isn't President because I believe that Joe Biden is President and that only one person can be President and that non-human animals cannot be President and... [whatever else there is]".
"Michael was not born in Germany" is an utterly inadequate report of S's belief. — creativesoul
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