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NO KNOW The man behind Naomi in Starbucks dropped his rabbit keyring, and she passed it back to him. The following day, she saw a bus screech to a halt,

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Presentation on theme: "NO KNOW The man behind Naomi in Starbucks dropped his rabbit keyring, and she passed it back to him. The following day, she saw a bus screech to a halt,"— Presentation transcript:

1 NO KNOW The man behind Naomi in Starbucks dropped his rabbit keyring, and she passed it back to him. The following day, she saw a bus screech to a halt, and heard a thud; the man from Starbucks was dead underneath it. She told the police she’d spoken to him yesterday in Starbucks, and he had a rabbit keyring. A few days later, she screamed as she saw the very same man in Starbucks again! He explained that his twin brother had been killed by the bus, adding “it must be confusing for people, as we both come to the same Starbucks, but never at the same time – and we have the same keyring” Did Naomi tell the Police the truth? Source: The Pig that Wants to be Eaten (2005) No.63

2 TODAY’S LESSON Today we will … Learn when a justified true belief is not knowledge Look at some examples of ‘lucky justified true beliefs’ Some important philosophers Gettier Important terminology Necessary and sufficient conditions Justification No false lemmas

3 GETTIER: WHEN A JUSTIFIED TRUE BELIEF ISN’T KNOWLEDGE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ldGT2R-pJMhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ldGT2R-pJM 4.50 mins

4 SMITH AND JONES Smith and Jones go for a job interview. Smith totally messes up the interview, and is sure he won’t get the job. Jones has brought his ten lucky coins along to the interview with him. Smith forms the belief: “the man who will get the job has 10 coins in his pocket”. To his surprise, Smith gets the job! He then realises that he too has 10 coins in his pocket. Smith had a justified true belief that the man with 10 coins would get the job. Did he KNOW it? Source: The Pig that Wants to be Eaten (2005) No.63

5 NO FALSE LEMMAS Philosophers use the term “no false lemmas” to mean that the conclusion must not be inferred from a false premise / assumption. With Smith and Jones, Smith arrived at his JTB from the intermediate conclusion that Jones would get the job. His conclusion that ‘the man who gets the job has 10 coins’ was based on a false lemma. This is sometimes known as the NFL principle

6 So the justified true belief that the man who got the job had 10 coins, was based on a false lemma (false belief) – the NFL principle state that this is not knowledge JONES WILL GET THE JOB JONES HAS 10 COINS C- THE MAN WHO GETS THE JOB WILL HAVE 10 COINS False lemma (false belief)

7 ACTIVITY – 25 MINUTES Create your own Gettier-style example in which someone has a j.t.b. which isn’t knowledge Draw this out as a storyboard / cartoon You may work alone or in pairs (in the pair, both partners must contribute) REMEMBER… X forms a belief X is justified in believing it The belief turns out to be true But something happened to mean that the truth is unrelated to the justification

8 HOMEWORK GO THROUGH THE TEST AND MY COMMENTS, AND LOOK AT THE MARK SCHEMES ON P62, AND WRITE YOURSELF SOME TARGETS TO IMPROVE. EMAIL ME YOUR ANSWERS FOLLOW SOME OF THE LINKS ON MOODLE ON JTB AND DRAW A MIND MAP BASED ON YOUR RESEARCH

9 ACTIVITY – 15 MINUTES Are j.t.b. really necessary? Read p.30-31 of your booklets and draw a mind map to summarise why justification, truth, and belief may not be necessary conditions of knowledge


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