The definition I'd offer is that to know is to process information correctly. — Hallucinogen
traditional definition of knowledge is 'justified true belief' — Janus
if we need to appeal to interpretation and belief (processing) and truth (correctness) — Janus
The definition I'd offer is that to know is to process information correctly.
Process here means/is defined as a computation, which is the reconfiguration of an input to an output.
Information here means/is defined as any structure (an object, a string of symbols) that can be binary/digitally distinguished. — Hallucinogen
traditional definition of knowledge is 'justified true belief'
— Janus
I'd say that belief presupposes knowledge, rather than knowledge being some condition on belief. In order to believe in something, you have to know something about that in which you believe. If you know no details about "it", you cannot rationally believe in "it". What I'm trying to say here is that we don't arrive at knowledge through belief, rather the other way around.
if we need to appeal to interpretation and belief (processing) and truth (correctness)
— Janus
You mean if the definition contains these aspects? — Hallucinogen
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