has no business simply assuming "P is true" without itself having justification, and this too would require justification, and it never ends — Astrophel
That does not look right.For something to be true, there must be a reason why it is true — Lionino
The "is true" in the JTB account simple rules out knowing things that are not true. It is distinct from the justification."S knows P iff S believes P, is justified in believing P and P is true" has no business simply assuming "P is true" without itself having justification — Astrophel
There are unknown truths — Banno
The "is true" in the JTB account simple rules out knowing things that are not true. It is distinct from the justification.
One cannot know things that are not true. — Banno
There are no unknown truths? Then I will bow to your omniscience, since you know everything that is true.No, not really. It is not as if there are conditions in the waiting for discovery that are true outside of discovery itself. — Astrophel
truth is a property of propositions — Astrophel
There are no unknown truths? Then I will bow to your omniscience, since you know everything that is true. — Banno
That is, it may be true, or otherwise, regardless of any relation to an individual knowing it to be true. — Banno
Your antirealism betrays you. — Banno
Yep, that's common, or garden, antirealism. It follows from Fitch that you know everything that is true.It is to say that truth occurs in the proposition, and there are no propositions "out there". Discoveries are events of constructing a truth. — Astrophel
So you can't say anything without using words, and so you cannot say anything? Or is it just that you cannot say anything true? What would you have us conclude here?It seems pretty clear that conditions in the world are really impossible to speak of outside of the grid of logic and language. — Astrophel
So you can't say anything without using words, and so you cannot say anything? Or is it just that you cannot say anything true? What would you have us conclude here? — Banno
So are you saying that the cows are only over there when acknowledged? That gives a vast power to acknowledgement.But it is that when I acknowledge this as true, this true event is a logical construction that only comes into existence when in the acknowledging. — Astrophel
So are you saying that the cows are only over there when acknowledged? That gives a vast power to acknowledgement.
I suggest that the cows are over there, whether you say so or not; and that it is the sentence "The cows are over there" that is constructed. And further, we can use the term "...is true" in the following way:
"The cows are over there" is true if and only if the cows are over there.
Further, isn't it the case that the cows can be over there even if it is not the case that you, I or anyone else knows that they are over there, or has justification for claiming that they are over there.
I don't have any idea of what a transcendental cow might be. Nor of what a cow might be, apart from the things we calls "cows". Some might maintain that had we not been raised in a culture that does nto use the word "cow", we might not be able to identify the cows from the trees. That might be so, but even if the cows might thereby cease to be spoken about, the cows would not thereby cease to be. — Banno
For something to be true, there must be a reason why it is true
— Lionino
That does not look right. — Banno
I haven't claimed anything of the sort.Do you honestly believe that propositions are somehow IN the things we talk about? I don't know why this is not clear. There are no propositions over there where the cows are. — Astrophel
Everything you know is true. That's not an assumption. If you think you know something, but what you think you know is not true, then you are mistaken about your knowing it.And the great flaw in the traditional analysis of knowledge has always been the assumption that P is true, — Astrophel
This is a much contested theory. But what's the alternative? A logician can simply decide that "know" is primitive; but that's just abandoning the idea of defining it."S knows P iff S believes P, is justified in believing P and P is true" — Astrophel
I take the point in the first sentence. I don't really understand the last sentence. Do you mean that only true statements can act as justification (where "p is false" is true iff p is false).And so I see that "P is true" entails the existence of P in an way that is supposed to be independent of justification which is an altogether nonsensical assumption. Can't be done. And this is because existence is part and parcel of justification itself. — Astrophel
Discovering something is revealing it, and makes perfect sense when applied to truths. One would need to explain what "constructing a truth" in a good more detail for it to make sense.Discoveries are events of constructing a truth. — Astrophel
It seems to me rather like a ceteris paribus clause, requiring us to withdraw our claim to know that p if it turns out that p is false.The "is true" in the JTB account simple rules out knowing things that are not true. It is distinct from the justification. — Banno
Yes, that's true. And, as your articulation of the point demonstrates, the possibility is built in to our language. Our language allows us - even requires us - to distinguish between language and the world,But having said that, there is indeed a close relation between epistemology and ontology. Statements being true or false is indeed dependent on what there is in the world. — Banno
That's true. But the grid of language (including logic and mathematics) does allow us to speak of conditions in the world. Truth would not be possible if it didn't. It is true that sometimes we need to develop or change the concepts that we apply to the world, and that seems difficult if you think of language as a grid - i.e. fixed and limited. But language is a hugely complex system which can be developed and changed - as is logic (as opposed to individual logical systems).It seems pretty clear that conditions in the world are really impossible to speak of outside of the grid of logic and language. — Astrophel
Further, isn't it the case that the cows can be over there even if it is not the case that you, I or anyone else knows that they are over there, or has justification for claiming that they are over there. — Banno
So how is it that causality makes for a connection that satisfies the conditions for knowledge? — Astrophel
All one has to do is examine causality for what it is, and it becomes clear that causality doesn't deliver knowledge — Astrophel
But rarely will a statement be true simply because of the observer — Banno
The cows are over there" will be true entirely and only if the cows are indeed over there; — Banno
Everything you know is true. That's not an assumption. If you think you know something, but what you think you know is not true, then you are mistaken about your knowing it. — Banno
And also, a seperate point, in the JTB account, a statement's being true is quite distinct from it's being justified.
But having said that, there is indeed a close relation between epistemology and ontology. Statements being true or false is indeed dependent on what there is in the world. — Banno
And the great flaw in the traditional analysis of knowledge has always been the assumption that P is true, that is, "S knows P iff S believes P, is justified in believing P and P is true" has no business simply assuming "P is true" without itself having justification, and this too would require justification, and it never ends. — Astrophel
This is a much contested theory. But what's the alternative? A logician can simply decide that "know" is primitive; but that's just abandoning the idea of defining it. — Ludwig V
This is focuses on first-hand knowledge — Ludwig V
Discovering something is revealing it, and makes perfect sense when applied to truths. One would need to explain what "constructing a truth" in a good more detail for it to make sense. — Ludwig V
That's true. But the grid of language (including logic and mathematics) does allow us to speak of conditions in the world. Truth would not be possible if it didn't. It is true that sometimes we need to develop or change the concepts that we apply to the world, and that seems difficult if you think of language as a grid - i.e. fixed and limited. But language is a hugely complex system which can be developed and changed - as is logic (as opposed to individual logical systems). — Ludwig V
You might be interested in Husserl's zig-zag explanation of the emergence of correspondence truth in phenomenology.
In general though, I think you might be confusing "justification" with what makes something true. Justification is what makes some person think something is true. The "truth-maker" is supposed to be the externally existing state of affairs in virtue of which a proposition is true. If there are problems with placing us into such an abstract realm, it wouldn't seem to be one of justification though. — Count Timothy von Icarus
All one has to do is examine causality for what it is, and it becomes clear that causality doesn't deliver knowledge
— Astrophel
This doesn't make sense. — Lionino
Perhaps the problem here is that we’re not understanding what you mean by “simply assuming ‛P is true’”. As I read JTB, no such assumption is made. The truth of P needs to be independently verified, yes, but by using the term “justification” for this (presumably perceptual or scientific) process, we get unnecessary confusion, as if the whole thing were somehow circular. But, as has been pointed out, truth-makers aren’t usually the same things as justifications. Truth-makers are states of affairs, not propositions. JTB states a hypothesis: If P is true, and S has justification for this belief that P, then S knows P. So, could you clarify where the “assumption” comes in? — J
Just ask how a causal relation produces a knowledge claim. Can't be done, simply because there is nothing in the apodictic principle that an event in the world requires a cause that can deliver an "aboutness" in the mind TO an object — Astrophel
Can't be done, simply because there is nothing in the apodictic principle that an event in the world requires a cause that can deliver an "aboutness" in the mind TO an object. — Astrophel
Consciousness is, on the one hand, consciousness of the object, and, on the other, consciousness of itself; consciousness of what for it is the true, and consciousness of its knowledge of the truth. Since both are for the same consciousness, this consciousness is itself their comparison; it is for this same consciousness to know whether its knowledge of the object corresponds to the object or not. (PhS 54/77–8)
Hegel’s analysis continues until consciousness discovers that its understanding of its object does not actually correspond to the stated definition of an object
of consciousness at all. An object of consciousness is stated to be something known by, but standing over against, consciousness. Consciousness eventually
discovers, however, that it actually understands its object to have one and the same categorial structure as itself and so not simply to stand over against consciousness after all. At that point, consciousness realizes that it is no longer mere consciousness but has become speculative thought, or absolute knowing.
Houlgate's commentary on the Greater Logic
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