I was referring to the meaning of the word 'bachelor'. It has no meaning beyond that which it is felicitously used for. — Isaac
Of course. The same sentence means different things in different contexts. Sometimes "I know x!" means "shut up, stop reminding me that x!" — Isaac
At which point it's no longer true that your entire language community believes John is a bachelor. — Isaac
I'm not making any claims at all about what's actually the case — Isaac
There's nothing more to John being a bachelor than my felicitously using the term 'bachelor'. — Isaac
As I've said, quite a few times now, I'm not making any claims at all about what's actually the case, only about what claims that something is the case mean, claims such as "John knows x". — Isaac
Your entire language community, every single speaker believes John is a bachelor. So to whom are you going to use a sentence in which you use the term "John is a wife"? — Isaac
To say 'x is a y' is to say something about what it is to be an y (at the least that x is one of the sorts of thing a y is). But what it is to be a y is determined by the community for whom a y is a thing. A y is not a thing outside of a community for whom it is a relevant aspect of their life.
So John is not a bachelor by virtue of properties of John alone. He's a bachelor by virtue of a relationship between properties of John and the role of those properties in the community for whom 'John', 'bachelor', 'wife', 'married', and 'man' mean anything at all. — Isaac
If the entire language community uses the term 'bachelor' of a person, but you use 'wife's, how are you going to make yourself understood? What more is there to the definition of a word than it's felicitous use? — Isaac
Yes, and if everyone starts using 'bachelor' of John despite his obviously being a woman and married, then it's the meaning of the word 'bachelor that will have changed, not the truth of my statement. — Isaac
John is a bachelor iff:
1) My language community generally believe that John is a man, and
2) My language community generally believe believe that John is unmarried
John is a bachelor iff:
1) John is a man, and
2) John is unmarried
Yes, and if everyone starts using 'bachelor' of John despite his obviously being a woman and married, then it's the meaning of the word 'bachelor that will have changed, not the truth of my statement. — Isaac
No. It depends on what the language community around me believes. — Isaac
I'm talking about what the expression "I know x" means. I'm claiming that it means something like "I believe x and most people in my language community would agree with me". I'm making this claim on the basis of the fact that this is how the expression is actually used. — Isaac
In this situation, should a moderator judge my belief to be wrong, given that i am employing the word "know" in the same sense in which i always employ it? — sime
As we are both not john, we can both agree that John's beliefs doesn't equal the truth, but that doesn't give John the epistemic warrant to know that fact, because it lies outside of John's cognitive closure.
At most, John can parrot the sentence without any understanding of what reality is like outside of the John's beliefs. — sime
There's nothing more to John being a bachelor than my felicitously using the term 'bachelor'. There's no God of languages checking the 'truly' correct use. — Isaac
John is a bachelor iff:
1) My language community generally believe that John is a man, and
2) My language community generally believe believe that John is unmarried
It's just about the correct use of the term 'Bachelor' — Isaac
How do we not (apart from just never using the expression "John knows that X is true"). The only distinction between me saying "John believes x is true (but it isn't)" and "John knows x is true" is my belief about whether x is true.
Then the entire human race is misusing the word 'knowledge' (as they're using it in case where they merely believe x is true)...or...your definition is wrong. Which is more parsimonious an explanation? — Isaac
If propositions are not speech acts, then where are they used? Do we mime them? Communicate them through the means of interpretive dance? — Isaac
If you say "It is raining", i cannot interpret you as saying anything other than " Michael believes it is raining". — sime
In your view, is it possible to grasp the meaning of an assertion without understanding the cause of the assertion? — sime
But since you cannot ascertain whether it is an independent fact — Isaac
So according to us? — sime
An independent fact according to whom? — sime
I asked how you ascertain whether I had toast this morning and your answer requires that you first know whether I had toast this morning. — Isaac
If 3) refers to your belief that it is raining — sime
How would you ascertain I had toast for breakfast, other than by your justifications for believing I had toast for breakfast, — Isaac
And do we know the rules of the game of life? Chess is an abstracted and bounded category not an unknown quantity. There is a difference between abstracted truth and applying truth to reality right? — I like sushi
But...
if one has a justified true belief then one has ascertained that one's belief is true.
...unarguably. — Isaac
So it is a justified belief NOT a justified true belief — I like sushi
OK, so
1. if one has a justifiedtruebelief then one has ascertained that one's belief is true
2. if one has ajustifiedtrue belief then one has ascertained that one's belief is true
You're saying that 1 is false, but 2 is just a tautology. — Isaac
if one has a true belief then one has ascertained that one's belief is true.
The above is a meaningless tautology, yes?
So the only thing added is the justification.
Yet you say that it's not the justification which makes a belief true. — Isaac
Are you saying that someone, in the real world, can know (with certainty) what the rules of a game are without ever being told what the rules are? — I like sushi
So a belief that's well justified is 'true'? — Isaac
Go on... — Isaac
Note the position of the quotation marks. — Isaac
But this latter state cannot ever be ascertained — Isaac
Which is the case precisely raised by Moore's paradox. — sime
But that doesn’t make them true. Truth is not, as far as we know, existent in reality. It is an abstract concept. — I like sushi
You appear to be talking about facts rather than what is true. — I like sushi
I claimed "it's raining" means the same as 'I believe "it's raining" — Isaac
