If the glimpses are very closely timed then he knows where his car is in between glimpses. — Janus
Of course we can question whether he can be absolutely certain it is his car even when he stares at it. — Janus
I prefer to accept less stringent criteria for certainty and I equate certainty with knowledge and uncertainty with varying degrees of doubt and belief. — Janus
He knows where he lives, but doesn't know whether his house is still there ... — Janus
he has very little reason to doubt that it is. — Janus
Plato has Socrates ending the first discussion of Justified True Believe describing himself as a midwife to nothing but farts. Yet here we are two-and-a-half millennia later, still farting. — Banno
With regard to justified true belief, this is a long standing but, in my opinion, incorrect interpretation of the Theaetetus. The question is: what is knowledge? The first thing to be noted is that one must have knowledge in order to correctly say what knowledge is. The proposed answer, justified true belief, is Theaetetus', not Socrates. It proves to be inadequate. It faces the same problem. What justifies an opinion? After all, the Sophists were skilled at giving justifications for opinions, both true and false. In order to determine if an argument is true, to have the ability to discern a true from a false logos, requires knowledge. But this knowledge is not itself a justified true belief.
Al is playing the cop for a fool, or a philosopher. — Banno
Let's hope Al is white. — Banno
If you have a computer assisted proof, do you know the result? Suppose it is a proof that you cannot follow; is the feeling of certitude necessary for the claim that you know the answer? — Banno
Philosophers put themselves in the position of the conjuror revealing where the queen really is after taking the sap's money. — unenlightened
In order to determine if an argument is true, to have the ability to discern a true from a false logos, requires knowledge. But this knowledge is not itself a justified true belief.
Well, there are issues here. It's just that the discussion in Theaetetus is not of much help. — Banno
It's just that the discussion in Theaetetus is not of much help. — Banno
They assume that the cars are still there and that they will be there when they return. I'm waiting to see how the story turns out before I decide whether they know or not. — Ludwig V
The Theaetetus doesn't point to the inadequacy of the JTB, but only to the inadequacy of Plato's idea of an account or an explanation or a justification ... — Ludwig V
Oh yes, I remember now, Socrates, having heard someone make the distinction, but I had forgotten it. He said that knowledge was true opinion accompanied by an account (logos) (201c)
A posteriori, he does, but not as a necessary fact.
— Wayfarer
I don't know what this means. The echo of Kripke doesn't help. — Ludwig V
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