 hypericin
hypericin         
         If it is true that much of what we think of as knowledge isn’t actually knowledge
then we must accept that as it is. — PL Olcott
What we cannot know with absolute certainty is that a kitten that we are looking at
right now physically exists, or is not a mere figment of the solipsist's imagination. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         And yet, if you see the kitten, and it is really there, then you know it is there. — hypericin
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         My apologies, but I have places to go this evening. I'll carry on our conversation tomorrow. — Philosophim
 Philosophim
Philosophim         
         Realizing that synthetic knowledge is impossible yet also understanding
that a close approximation of synthetic knowledge has proven to be very
reliable how do these things fit within the Gettier cases?
Gettier cases prove that a reasonable approximation of knowledge
sometimes diverges from actual knowledge. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         I simply noted that truth cannot be a necessary requirement for synthetic knowledge. — Philosophim
This shows that the T aspect of JTB is required.
— PL Olcott
This is not in dispute — hypericin
 Philosophim
Philosophim         
         You are disputing this.
Most everyone knows that ALL knowledge must be true or instead of
knowledge we have false presumptions. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
          Philosophim
Philosophim         
         The meaning of the word "knowledge" requires that it be true. — PL Olcott
Try and find any false statement that counts as knowledge that is
not merely knowledge of its falsity. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         I mentioned an example earlier. Over 2000 years ago people used to know that the Sun circled in the sky around the Earth. — Philosophim
At one time swans were known to be white. Later, someone discovered that swans were black on another continent. — Philosophim
 T Clark
T Clark         
          PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         A more reasonable solution IMO is falsifiability: — hypericin
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         My old saying is if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck lays
eggs and everything else just like a duck it could be a space
alien perfectly disguised as a duck.
— PL Olcott
Here inductive logic works wonders. — jgill
 Philosophim
Philosophim         
         From their frame-of-reference they could see the Sun cross the sky
thus saying they they see the Sun cross the sky is accurate. — PL Olcott
The correct thing to do at the time is to say all the swans that I know about are white.
To say that all swans are white is incorrect reasoning. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         No. At the time it was just understood that swans were white. — Philosophim
 Philosophim
Philosophim         
          PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         I'm noting that swans by definition were known as white at the time. The house by definition is not white, it has the attribute of white. The swan by definition was white. It was part of its identity. — Philosophim
 Philosophim
Philosophim         
         To conclude that all swans are white on the basis of some swans are
white is flat out incorrect and there cannot possibly be two ways about this. — PL Olcott
Do we say, "All the gravity we have encountered so far causes bodies to accelerate towards each other, or do we say gravity causes all bodies to accelerate towards one another? — Philosophim
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         But for them, they've never encountered or heard of a green apple. An apple being red is part of the definition of being an apple. — Philosophim
 Philosophim
Philosophim         
         If they assume that all apples are red without seeing all apples
then they are wrong even if their assumption is correct. — PL Olcott
I will count on gravity as long as it continues to function. I will not
assume that it is an immutable law of nature. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         Within the model of the actual world we can know the stipulated relations between elements because the model of the actual world is an axiomatic system.That means you can never know anything. — Philosophim
 Philosophim
Philosophim         
         Within the model of the actual world we can know the stipulated relations between elements because the model of the actual world is an axiomatic system. — PL Olcott
When we attempt to map things in the world based on what appear to be sense data from the sense organs we cannot possibly tell the difference between a duck and a space alien perfectly disguised as a duck. — PL Olcott
This seems to indicate that we cannot possibly know that any mapping from what appears to be physical sensations to their element in the model of the actual world is a correct mapping. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
          Philosophim
Philosophim         
         Without the qualified mapping that I propose Buddhist enlightenment is impossible — PL Olcott
because societal conditioning is construed as actual truth rather than possible truth. — PL Olcott
This closes the mind so that when evidence is presented of the actual truth it is never noticed. — PL Olcott
 PL Olcott
PL Olcott         
         Once again, you're jumping past the question, "How do we know we have actual truth?" — Philosophim
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