There's my proof that there's an unproven truth. — flannel jesus
How would that look? — flannel jesus
How do you not love Nietzsche. Great starting point for these questions. — Fire Ologist
there was a star upon which clever beasts invented knowing. — Fire Ologist
Sure, knowledge is a rigorously arrived at belief in JTB theories of truth. — Bylaw
I don't think I've seen a propositional knowledge out in the wild though. I have seen the others I referenced. I can perhaps see a propositional knowledge out in the wild if I put a particular kind of retrospective goggles on. But if you insist... — fdrake
That's true, but the OP asks if knowledge is merely belief. Apparently, it's implying that the difference between knowing and believing is empirical verification or rational justification. And so, we argue about shades of truth. :smile:All knowledge requires belief. — ENOAH
All knowledge requires belief.
— ENOAH
That's true, but the OP asks if knowledge is merely belief. Apparently, it's implying that the difference between knowing and believing is empirical verification or rational justification. And so, we argue about shades of truth. :smile: — Gnomon
I know how to ride a bike, plane a board, paint a picture, write a poem, play the piano and so on, and I don't see how any of that requires belief. — Janus
Where does that leave us? — Janus
In both agreement and good standing. Glad to join you, if that's okay? — creativesoul
. I always welcome your input. — Janus
I don't think beleif is required. You see people riding bikes. You see the bike and grasp how it works. You learn to ride it. No need to beleive anything.
What particular belief that would be necessary in order to learn to ride a bike did you have in mind. — Janus
This is because it would be perfectly possible that one needs to believe while learning, but once they are an adept practitioner that belief ceases. In other words, your argument applies to learning, but there is no reason to believe that your argument will also apply to riding simpliciter. — Leontiskos
Yep. That was the plan.you may be working with too broad a brush — Janus
Yep. And if know-how were a subset of know-that, that might be a problem. But if knowing-that is a subset of knowing-how, that is not a problem - is it?Know-how involves skills that may not be dependent on knowing anything in a propositional sense. — Janus
Interesting. A good reply. Could you be said to know this if no action at all followed from it - including saying "You are always late!"? I think one could. So know-that extends past know-how, if only marginally.I may know that my friend regularly arrives late to appointments, but I need not necessarily do anything with that knowledge. — Janus
Well, it implies belief in Bicycles and riding.I may know how to ride a bicycle and that knowledge seems to have nothing necessarily to do with belief. — Janus
The original argument you gave had to do with “avoiding danger,” and because of this it was a good example of the invalidity of the inference from learning to riding. There are a variety of ways in which the experienced rider is not avoiding danger in the way that someone who is learning is avoiding danger. — Leontiskos
One sees the bike, handles it...no need for belief. — Janus
Yep, understood. You are interested in the dynamics of belief.I am looking at what happens through time and what we know/think/have access to at any given moment. — Bylaw
Not an assumption. You did say, in italics,you are still assuming that I think we can't know anything — Bylaw
which presumably means that there is no knowledge, just belief.All beliefs are the same and what people call knowledge is no better than any other belief — Bylaw
Becoming experienced requires learning how to ride. Learning how to ride requires belief. — creativesoul
Becoming experienced requires learning how to ride. Learning how to ride requires belief.
— creativesoul
And your tacit conclusion is, “Therefore, riding a bike requires belief.” The question and ambiguity is this: did it merely require belief at some point in the past, or does it require ongoing belief? — Leontiskos
I may know that my friend regularly arrives late to appointments, but I need not necessarily do anything with that knowledge.
— Janus
Interesting. A good reply. Could you be said to know this if no action at all followed from it - including saying "You are always late!"? I think one could. So know-that extends past know-how, if only marginally. — Banno
Well, it implies belief in Bicycles and riding. — Banno
This is because it would be perfectly possible that one needs to believe while learning, but once they are an adept practitioner that belief ceases. — Leontiskos
I think he claim only extends to instances in the past. Any application to future appointments would be speculation, and couldn't amount to knowledge, I don't think.
You can only know that your friend, has previously consistently arrived late to appointments. You may know that it is likely he/she will do so again. — AmadeusD
One can be certain of what's going to happen. Those things can happen as expected. After they happen, one knows.
That doesn't seem right. — creativesoul
One can have certainty, as an attitude. I don't think it's right to say one can be certain, without a Crystal ball. I don't think it's right to say that the occurrence being in-line with the expectation amounts to knowledge. That could be true or someone convinced they've got the Lottery numbers right. They didn't know. But they were certain, and right, in the event. — AmadeusD
I don't think it's right to say that the occurrence being in-line with the expectation amounts to knowledge. — AmadeusD
Are you implying that certitude is never warranted? — creativesoul
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