I don't think the rites themselves can be true or false, only more or less accurate, more or less fit for task — fdrake
Well that's the thing. Some of what you say in your post has the feel of the "rites" (clever choice, that) underwriting knowledge production -- a bit like what Austin says about how only in specific circumstances does saying "I name this ship the Queen Mary III" make it so that the ship is now named "Queen Mary III."
But it's evident that we can judge whether a given candidate for a rite is knowledge producing. "You don't find out how many we have in the store by checking the receiving logs; you have to go and count them." What's going on there? I could claim that we are relying on a pre-existing understanding of knowledge to judge whether a rite works -- but it also looks like I'm proposing an alternative rite already known to work.
There's circularity here that leads to a bootstrapping problem. I have to know what knowledge is to know whether a rite candidate works; but all I have for an understanding of knowledge is pointing to rites known to produce it. How could I ever get from not having a rite that produces knowledge to having at least one I can use for reference? If I don't know what knowledge is, how can I possibly find out?
That bootstrapping problem infects every attempt at "explaining" knowledge -- for instance, if we take the talk of rites here as an explanation.
aside(It's why Cook Wilson said he thought the very phrase "theory of knowledge" was nonsense, and why Williamson ends up plumping for "knowledge first." --- I know only a little about these guys, so in part I'm trying to see if I can find my own path to where they end up before reading them. Some of what I'm writing has been kicking around in my head for a long time ...)
You can't 'just know', even if you really truly know. The working needs to be able to be shown. — fdrake
Now that's a biggie. For something to be a rite, we must be able to set out the steps in detail and teach those steps to the novitiate.
Is it true? It's at least true that if you follow the steps then you will acquire knowledge. But do you know
because you followed the steps? Do the steps constitute knowledge acquisition? Is there maybe one step where we say, "Here, here's where the knowledge comes in"? Again, I think any such claims will be circular. How could you possibly come to know such a thing? So whatever the status of these rites, I don't think they can be an account or an explanation of knowledge.
One thing I think I'm resisting here is the suggestion (derived from Sellars) that "I know ..." is not really a factual claim at all, but an offer to defend or to justify my claim, to enter the space of reasons. In "I know X because Y," I'm not taking Y as being my justification or my warrant for claiming that X. I'm thinking of X and Y as being more intimately related than that. If I lack one justification, I might have another. You can swap out Y's. Reasons are things you can "come up with". The Y I'm interested in is not something like the basis for an inference, but more like an explication of what sense in which I'm using the word "know".
So the sense in which the steps of the rite must be capable of being made explicit, that could be that you must be able to say in what sense you meant the word "know". (Is there really more than one sense? Need to come back to that.) And since we do also make inferences based on evidence, can we tell the difference between distinguishing senses of "know" and offering justifications? "It was crowded and I didn't get a good look at him, but I heard him laugh and I'd know that laugh anywhere. He was there alright." Here's where I would start: one of the absolutely central elements of a knowledge claim like this is "I was there."
"I was there" is powerful. Imagine a vet listening to some guys at a bar, talking big about what we should have done in Vietnam or in Afghanistan. "You don't know what you're talking about," he says. "And you do? You some kind of expert?" "I was there." End of debate.
But again (and this is also, I understand, a key point for Williamson) knowing doesn't automatically mean you know that you know. (Knowing is not "luminous.") You can think you know, because you were there, but you weren't paying attention at the crucial moment, or you didn't recognize the significance of what you were seeing, and so on. We need there to be something definitive in the canonical situation, something automatic, but there are so many ways to fall short of that we have to be sensitive to.
One last bit on justification and "just knowing" without reasons. If we start from some position, with knowledge of some facts, say, and reason from there to something else we are prepared to count as knowledge, something we intend to rely upon, that's a bit like a "save point" in a video game. Calling it knowledge means precisely that you don't have to go back before that, and you can even jettison the reasons you relied on and just keep the conclusion. Knowledge of this sort is detachable from the reasons supporting it. When questioned, you have to check to see if you kept the original reasons; if you did, you have to reconstruct the inference, and if you didn't then you have to reconstruct the whole thing. Maybe it'll turn out your reasons weren't solid, or your inference was faulty. That happens. But in treating, let's just say it, such a belief as knowledge, you're in a way committed to not needing reasons for it anymore. It's a new save point you can treat as as-far-back-as-I-need-to-go.
And that could be one of those cases where we're reaching for a word, "knowledge", because the application here would have some structural similarity to its use elsewhere, even though the cases are actually different. In the situation where I know it was a wolf because I saw it, we are not making an inference and so there's no need to talk of reasons; in the case where we have made what we believe is a successful inference, we no longer seem to need the reasons (we have our save point) and so we call that "knowledge." But they're not really the same sort of thing at all. Knowledge has this strange dual nature, that it can be what you are most able or least able to defend, most willing or least willing to support with reasons.