Socrates:
But what if he should praise the soul of one of us for virtue and wisdom? Is it not worth while for the one who hears to examine eagerly the one who is praised, and for that one to exhibit his qualities with eagerness?
Theaetetus
Certainly, Socrates.
Socrates
Then, my dear Theaetetus, this is just the time for you to exhibit your qualities and for me to examine them ... (145b)
Then knowledge and wisdom are the same thing? (145e)
Well, it is just this that I am in doubt about and cannot fully grasp by my own efforts—what knowledge really is. (145 e)
Socrates pursuit of knowledge of knowledge is part of his desire to be wise. Abstracted puzzles fail to catch what is at issue in the question of knowledge. — Fooloso4
Well, it is just this that I am in doubt about and cannot fully grasp by my own efforts—what knowledge really is.
Plato's idea of an account in the Theaetetus is what we might call an analysis of whatever we are giving an account of in terms of its elements. — Ludwig V
I used to imagine that I heard certain persons say that the primary elements of which we and all else are composed admit of no rational explanation ...
My point is precisely that the model of account is not helpful for the problem he is considering — Ludwig V
Socrates pursuit of knowledge of knowledge is part of his desire to be wise. Abstracted puzzles fail to catch what is at issue in the question of knowledge.
— Fooloso4
That is certainly an interesting question. But Plato seems to veer away from it when Socrates says
Well, it is just this that I am in doubt about and cannot fully grasp by my own efforts—what knowledge really is. — Ludwig V
I'm not sure what you mean by "abstracted puzzles". — Ludwig V
Why would he use this as the model of an account if it is not helpful? — Fooloso4
More specifically, extracting things from the dialogue, as if they were stand alone arguments. — Fooloso4
Socrates human wisdom, his knowledge of ignorance, is in a limited sense knowledge of knowledge. — Fooloso4
Why would he use this as the model of an account if it is not helpful?
— Fooloso4
That is the puzzle. — Ludwig V
But I don't see that justifies citing the dialogue and then ignoring it. — Ludwig V
The reason, I think, he introduces it is not to provide a model of an account but to address "certain persons". — Fooloso4
it is helpful to the extent that it says what knowledge is not, that is, JTB. — Fooloso4
Are you referring to anyone specific? — Fooloso4
If you can check out Gettier's original article, you can decide for yourself about my complaint. — Ludwig V
1. Plato seems to be considering some such definition at Theaetetus 20 I, and perhaps accepting one at Meno 98.
Then when judges are justly persuaded about matters which one can know only by having seen them and in no other way, in such a case, judging of them from hearsay, having acquired a true opinion of them,they have judged without knowledge, though they are rightly persuaded, if the judgement they have passed is correct. (201b-3)
... the use so often made of Plato in discussing JTB. — Ludwig V
My contention is that it is the misuse of Plato, based on a misunderstanding of the dialogue. — Fooloso4
I have read it. It is actually Gettier himself who drags Plato in. He says in a footnote: — Fooloso4
But the questions of knowledge that Plato raises far exceed the narrower cases that Gettier addresses. In addition, for Plato the issue is not "are you justified for believing" in the sense of having some reason, however insufficient for believing, but "can you defend the belief" in such a way so as to demonstrate its truth. — Fooloso4
Perhaps he didn't believe that his argument does refute Plato's version. — Ludwig V
Emphasis added.Plato seems to be considering some such definition at Theaetetus 20 I, and perhaps accepting one at Meno 98.
... have judged without knowledge
... yet that there is a difference between right opinion and knowledge is not at all a conjecture with me but something I would particularly assert that I knew: there are not many things of which I would say that, but this one, at any rate, I will include among those that I know.
So that right opinion will be no whit inferior to knowledge in worth or usefulness as regards our actions ...
For me, that's a dilemma. My problem is I haven't been able to develop a third alternative. — Ludwig V
If we let go of the false belief that knowledge is JTB the dilemma is dissolved. In both the Theaetetus and Meno mathematics plays a key role. Socrates KNOWS how to solve the geometric problem in the Meno, he does not just have an opinion, true or false, about how to solve it. — Fooloso4
The paradox is best visible when we ask a question other than "do you know where your car is, monsieur/mademoiselle?" — Agent Smith
But what I collect from the passage I quote is that you think that the difference between knowledge and true belief is that one has the skill to establish the truth that is at stake. — Ludwig V
... matters which one can know only by having seen them and in no other way, (201b)
Well, it is just this that I am in doubt about and cannot fully grasp by my own efforts—what knowledge really is. (145 e)
... what Plato says in the Gorgias about episteme. — Ludwig V
Where is your car?" is a question that doesn't do justice to the scenario as described. How is Al or Betty supposed to answer it? — Agent Smith
I think he is expressing a genuine type of skepticism. We do know what knowledge is but in trying to say exactly what it is and is not, it alludes us. — Fooloso4
4. Having answered all three questions, would you like to revise your answer to any of them?
5. Why? — Ludwig V
1. "knowledge" claim is a principled based or procedural form of certainty. And principles/procedures can validate our "knowledge" claim to the extant they are reliable. — neomac
Condition one makes "knowledge" claims legitimate. Condition two makes knowledge" claims fallible. — neomac
cookery is flattery disguised as medicine (465b)
as self-adornment is to gymnastic, so is sophistry to legislation; and as cookery is to medicine, so is rhetoric to justice. (465c)
It is in light of the good that the difference between opinion and knowledge can be seen. — Fooloso4
Nihilism is the concept of reason separated from the concept of the good. — Stanley Rosen
It seems as if you are a platonist. Is that fair? — Ludwig V
There is no treatise (suggramma) by me on these subjects, nor will there ever be. (341c)
I feel I want to ask you where you are going with this? — Ludwig V
Something reliable can fail once or twice and still be classed as reliable. But if something certain turns out wrong, it is no longer certain. — Ludwig V
I prefer "defeasible" because "fallible knowledge" can be taken to mean that If I claim to know something on good grounds but it still turns out false, it is nonetheless knowledge. So I'm anxious to insist that knowledge doesn't fail - people do. So a claim to knowledge that p must be withdrawn if p turns out to be false. — Ludwig V
I substantially agree but what I find more interesting to notice is the following: while the falsity of p implies that "I know that p" is false, the epistemic "withdrawal" from a belief that "turns out" to be false (as opposed to "unjustified") might correspond to different epistemic conditions: e.g. "I don't know that p", "I know that non-p", "I believe that non-p", "I don't believe that p", or "I doubt that p". Yet only "I know that non-p" would make sense to say to me in that case. In other words, knowledge claims defeated out of falsify are not just "withdrawn" but "replaced" by other knowledge claims. — neomac
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