I think there is a valid distinction between knowledge and belief, although I also think that much of what is generally considered to be knowledge might be more accurately classed as belief. — Janus
What distinguishes a 'fact' from a belief is that THAT PERSON ONLY (…) has decided…. — Chet Hawkins
The T in JTB is kinda awkward. If someone says they believe something, they're already saying they think it's true. If someone says they're justified in believing something, they're saying they think it's true, and their thought is justified. — flannel jesus
Thank you, I might read about it some time, didn't know it's antiquated, but is that your personal opinion or is it established that JTB is out of date?"JTB" is antiquated. Much more cogent: — 180 Proof
And the "J", justification condition makes only sense if both belief and truth are fulfilled, that is, you believe true is indeed true, which justifies your belief that something is true.
On another side if you believe something that's not true then your belief is not justified — SpaceDweller
Sorry but this makes no sense to me, how could "true" statement be superfluous?If that were how people were using the word 'justified', then either the T or the J would be superfluous in JTB. I don't think many people think that way. — flannel jesus
No because believing something which is false is not justified belief, because precondition for justification is that true is not false.I certainly don't think that way. Someone could have a justified belief that's false. — flannel jesus
The Tripartite Analysis of Knowledge:
S knows that p if
- p is true;
- S believes that p;
- S is justified in believing that p.
Wl, yes. Sometimes folk get things wrong. They think they know stuff when they don't. And the only way this can happen is if they believe something that is not true.Did we falsely think we knew before? — Bylaw
You can't "realise your error" unless there is error. Error occurs when you believe something that is not true. For you to occasionally be wrong, you must also sometimes be right.But later we may realize errors or get new data and then we know X is false. — Bylaw
If what you say is right, that Justified <-> True, then it's pointless to say both. One or the other will suffice, because it implies the other. That's what I mean by "superfluous". Redundant.Sorry but this makes no sense to me, how could "true" statement be superfluous? — SpaceDweller
If what you say is right, that Justified <-> True, then it's pointless to say both. — flannel jesus
That tripart seems to be doing exactly what I'm doing - separating "justified" and "true". It doesn't seem to me to support what you're saying. — flannel jesus
It can't go unnoticed how various people "know" things that contradict what other people "know" as well. Some people know that Jesus is King, other people know Muhammad was the last prophet, other people know Krishna is the eighth avatar of Vishnu. — flannel jesus
No.
Not for "any belief" but only those beliefs that are true first are then justified, while beliefs that are false first are then unjustified. — SpaceDweller
That means, for any belief you have, it's either (true and justified), or its (untrue and unjustified), right? — flannel jesus
Yes.If you believe something that's true, then it's justified. — flannel jesus
Yes.If you believe something that's not true, then it's not justified. — flannel jesus
No.That means, for any belief you have, it's either (true and justified), or its (untrue and unjustified), right? — flannel jesus
Which is incorrect because P2 (S believes that p;) was removed but is required for belief to be justified.P1: p is true;
P3: S is justified in believing that p.
You reduced this to simply "Justified <-> True" which is false because belief condition was omitted from equation. — SpaceDweller
If you believe something that's true, then it's justified.
If you believe something that's not true, then it's not justified. — flannel jesus
Nuh — Banno
It's not ommitted, it's a given. We're talking about a belief. — flannel jesus
The article doesn't say "you're justified when it's true, and youre unjusitified when it's false". — flannel jesus
I think you are correct, because both terms are subject to varying definitions, depending on the context. Philosophically, knowledge is "justified true belief"*1, which is the basis of the scientific method : verification of hypotheses. But William James*2 noted that "many people" seem to assume their beliefs are facts. Physicist David Bohm*3 echoed that insight, along with David Hume's quip about Reason being the slave of the passions.I think there is a valid distinction between knowledge and belief, although I also think that much of what is generally considered to be knowledge might be more accurately classed as belief. — Janus
Yes, I understand. We are talking about beliefs. Everything I'm saying is about beliefs. — flannel jesus
ofc. not, it should be worded as unjustified belief because it's not true.I beleive or disbelieve statements. Those statements can be true or false. But if I believe in a statement, and that statement is also false, I would never word that as "I believe in false" — flannel jesus
I would word that as "I believe in that statement, and <later when I discover it's false> I was wrong about that belief. I was incorrect." — flannel jesus
So, with that in mind, the question I guess is, "Can you ever be justified in believing in a statement when that statement is false?" — flannel jesus
"Can you ever be unjustified in beleiving in a statement that's true?" — flannel jesus
Banno and I both say, YES, both of those things are possible. — flannel jesus
I believe my house is going to still be there when I get home. I think I'm pretty justified in that. — flannel jesus
To my understanding Banno does not agree with you — SpaceDweller
It's not hard to think of examples in which you believe something that is true, but your belief is unjustified, or you believe something with a justification, but it's not true.
I think there is a valid distinction between knowledge and belief, — Janus
It would better be put “there is only belief.” Or “there is no knowledge.” — Fire Ologist
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