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WHAT IS KNOWLEDGE?
(AND DO WE HAVE ANY?)
Knowledge-how:
Knowing how to drive. Knowing how to play piano. Knowing how to beat the stock market.
One can know a proposition if, only if: (i) That proposition is true; (ii) One believes that proposition; (iii) Ones belief is justified.
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Gettier Counterexamples
Edmund Gettier (b. 1927)
Examples of justified true belief where the true belief in question is just too lucky to count as knowledge
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A Gettier-Style Case
The Stopped Clock
You believe that the time is 7.28am. You are justified in believing that the time is 7.28am. It is true that it is 7.28am. But you dont know that its 7.28am because, unbeknownst to you, what you are looking at is a stopped clock.
One can know a proposition if, only if: (i) That proposition is true; (ii) One believes that proposition; (iii) Ones belief is justified; (iv) Ones belief is not based on any false assumptions (or lemmas).
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Radical Scepticism
Radical scepticism is the view that knowledge (at least of the world around us) is impossible. Sceptics make use of sceptical hypotheses, scenarios where everything is as it usually appears to be, but where we are being radically deceived.
The sceptic says that we cannot rule-out sceptical hypotheses, and thus argues that we are unable to know anything about the world around us.
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Brains-in-Vats
Question: Why dont we know that were not brains-in-vats? Answer: Because we cant tell the difference!
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Epistemic Vertigo
It is certainly part of the human condition that we are fallible creatures. But perhaps, once we reflect on the matter (and thus reflectively ascend), we realise that there is more than just fallibility at issue here. Maybe we simply dont know as much as we typically suppose.
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Further Reading
I explore these issues about the nature and extent of knowledge in my introductory textbook, What is This Thing Called Knowledge? (Routledge). See especially parts 1 & 3.
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