Knowledge as JTB Someone S has knowledge of P IFF: 1. S believes P 2. S is justified in believing P 3. P is true.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Believing Where We Cannot Prove Philip Kitcher
Advertisements

Theories of Knowledge Knowledge is Justified-True-Belief Person, S, knows a proposition, y, iff: Y is true; S believes y; Y is justified for S. (Note:
Justified True Belief Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Gettier and the analysis of knowledge Michael Lacewing
The Cogito. The Story So Far! Descartes’ search for certainty has him using extreme sceptical arguments in order to finally arrive at knowledge. He has.
Reliabilism and virtue epistemology
© Michael Lacewing Scepticism Michael Lacewing
Epistemology Tihamér Margitay – Péter Hartl 6. Reliabilism.
Value conflicts and assumptions - 1 While an author usually offers explicit reasons why he comes to a certain conclusion, he also makes (implicit) assumptions.
Theory of knowledge Lesson 2
Introduction to Epistemology. Perception- Transparency Good case and bad cases: illusion and hallucination Intentionalism- content of experience is same.
René Descartes ( ) Father of modern rationalism. Reason is the source of knowledge, not experience. All our ideas are innate. God fashioned us.
Hume’s Problem of Induction. Most of our beliefs about the world have been formed from inductive inference. (e.g., all of science, folk physics/psych)
Malcolm’s ontological argument Michael Lacewing
The tripartite theory of knowledge
Descartes on Certainty (and Doubt)
Gettier’s response to JTB. Gettier put forward many examples to show that JTB doesn’t always mean we have knowledge, that actually in fact sometimes it’s.
The Cosmological Argument. Aquinas’s Cosmological Argument Cosmological Argument is ‘a posteriori’ Attempts to prove the existence of God There are three.
Unit 8: Knowledge Chris Heathwood Office: Hellems 192
How Claims of Knowledge Are Justified Foundationalism: knowledge claims are based on indubitable foundations –I can doubt whether there is a world, whether.
Faith and Reason And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us… -John 1:14 This is a great mystery… -Eph 5:32 The Holy Family with Painted Frame -Rembrandt.
BASIC CONCEPTS OF ARGUMENTS
Knowledge Gettier’s Argument. Review The Tripartite Analysis: S knows that p iff S has a justified, true belief that p. The Knowledge Thesis: In order.
Knowledge, Skepticism, and Descartes. Knowing In normal life, we distinguish between knowing and just believing. “I think the keys are in my pocket.”
 According to philosophical skepticism, we can’t have knowledge of the external world.
Knowledge as justified true belief We have knowledge only when a proposition is believed to be true We have knowledge only when a proposition is believed.
KNOWLEDGE What is it? How does it differ from belief? What is the relationship between knowledge and truth? These are the concerns of epistemology How.
What is Knowledge? Knowledge=Justified True Belief? The Causal Theory What Goodman’s Riddle Means for Knowledge Claims Chris Dierich & Kristin Schaupp.
Knowledge and Belief Some fundamental problems. Knowledge: a problematic concept “Knowledge” is ambiguous in a number of ways; the term can mean variously:
Epistemology Section 1 What is knowledge?
Philosophy Review Terms/People/Ideas we’ve studied.
Epistemology, Part I Introduction to Philosophy Jason M. Chang.
Infallible Justification Markus Lammenranta Humanistinen tiedekunta / Markus Lammenranta / Infallible Justification1.
Logic. What is logic? Logic (from the Ancient Greek: λογική, logike) is the use and study of valid reasoning. The study of logic features most prominently.
How do I tackle a 15 mark equation?!. Identify the key words in the question Decide which of the central 3 themes/questions it is dealing with WRITE Write.
Epistemology Tihamér Margitay – Péter Hartl 4. Foundationalism.
Epistemology ► Area of Philosophy that deals with questions concerning knowledge ► Philosophy of Knowledge.
Descartes' Evil Demon Hypothesis:
Reliabilism.
Epistemology – Study of Knowledge
Varieties of Scepticism. Academic Scepticism Arcesilaus, 6 th scolarch of the Academy Arcesilaus, 6 th scolarch of the Academy A return to the Socratic.
By Arunav, Aran, Humza.
René Descartes, Meditations Introduction to Philosophy Jason M. Chang.
5 mark question feedback... JTB account is only a definition of propositional knowledge. Explain precisely what it is about the JTB account that Gettier.
Realism and Idealism Direct/naive from perceptual from from hallucination & from time lag Veridical perception.
Critical Thinking Lecture 7a Gettier
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 8 Epistemology #1 By David Kelsey.
Epistemology (How do you know something?)  How do you know your science textbook is true?  How about your history textbook?  How about what your parents.
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,
I think therefore I am - Rene Descartes. REASON (logic) It has been said that man is a rational animal. All my life I have been searching for evidence.
An Outline of Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 8 Epistemology #1
Proof of God? Inquiries into the Philosophy of Religion A Concise Introduction Chapter 12 Faith and Reason By Glenn Rogers, Ph.D. Copyright © 2012 Glenn.
Philosophy of Science Lars-Göran Johansson Department of philosophy, Uppsala University
At this time I admit nothing that is not necessarily true. I am therefore precisely nothing but a thinking thing Descartes.
Péter Hartl & Dr. Tihamér Margitay Dept. of Philosophy and the History of Science 1111 Budapest, Egry J. st. 1. E 610.
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Intuition and deduction thesis (rationalism)
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
The Tripartite Definition of Knowledge
Justified True Belief Understand JTB Know the key definitions
Gettier and the analysis of knowledge
Michael Lacewing Reliabilism Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Descartes’ proof of the external world
Rationalism.
On whiteboards Summarise Gettier’s two examples and explain what they show. Can you think of any responses to Gettier?
Quick Test (Whiteboards)
Knowledge.
What can you remember? Why did we say Justification is necessary for knowledge? What did we say some of the issues with saying truth is necessary for.
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 8 Epistemology #1
Presentation transcript:

Knowledge as JTB Someone S has knowledge of P IFF: 1. S believes P 2. S is justified in believing P 3. P is true

JTB This definition of knowledge was formulated by Plato in Theaetetus. It remains the generally accepted definition of knowledge Edmund Gettier, however, challenges the adequacy of such a definition – it is known as the Gettier Problem

Justification One primary question: Does having justification for P entail that P is true? – Infalliblism: If S knows P, then S cannot be mistaken in believing P, thus Ss justification for believing P guarantees its truth. i.e. one cannot be justified in believing a false claim. – Falliblism: The infalliblist argument only works in the case where S cannot possibly be wrong about P. However, there is nothing to guarantee that S is right. Basically, its right to say that It is impossible for S to be wrong about P if he knows P. but it is not necessarily right to say that If S knows P, then it is impossible for him to be wrong about P.

Falliblism and its implications Falliblism suggests that truth and justification may or may not be connected in any situation. How then can we possibly connect Ss belief that P with the truth of P correctly? – Foundationalism – Coherentism – Reliablism

Foundationalism We justify one belief with another, which also requires support from others and so on and so forth. Foundationalism suggests that there is a termination to such a regression in a set of beliefs that are fundamentally and independently secure. These beliefs are either self-justifying, self-evident or indefeasible. However, it is difficult to see how these self-evident beliefs (mathematics and simple logical propositions) can lead to more complex, dependent beliefs. The latter does not seem to be deducible from the former. If it cannot be deduced, then it would have to be induced, but induction is in itself defeasible.

Reliabilism Reliable process of having a belief – Rational – Scientific – Mathematical – Logical Problems: – Externalism vs internalism debate: no knowledge of process, yet knowledge – The New Evil Demon

Coherentism Attempts to solve the regress problem – Foundationalisms answer – axioms! Descartes, Spinoza – Coherentism – regress means nothing – fundamental assumption is wrong! The criteria of coherence – System of beliefs should cohere – Use the same explanation for divergent statements – Use ONE explanation for similar statements

Gettier Problem Somethings wrong with JTB

Case 1: Original case Two characters, Smith (Main) and John. Both sign-up for job and President of the Co. tells Smith that John got the job. Smith comes to the conclusion that whoever got the job had ten coins in the pocket. He has this belief because he counted the coins in Johns pocket. His belief is justified. (JB present)

But… Smith got the job instead, not knowing that he did had ten coins in his pocket as well. So his belief is true. (JTB criteria fulfilled.) But is it knowledge??? No, because he did not know who truly got the job.

Another example John sees a person who appears to be Jane dancing in room A. John then forms a belief that Jane is dancing. He can justify it because he has seen someone who looks like Jan dance. The belief is also true because Jane is indeed dancing.

But… However, despite it fulfilling JTB, there is an error in it because even though Jane is dancing, she is not dancing in room A. Instead she is dancing in room B and the person which John saw dancing in room A was Janes identical twin. His belief cannot be knowledge because he does not know the true location of Jane.

Solutions to this 1.Infallibility proposal 2.Eliminate Luck Proposal 3.No False Evidence Proposal

Infallibility proposal Explained that because we use our senses to justify, we make errors. Therefore the best way to prevent such a case is to not use any fallible evidence to justify a belief at all. This is however, unrealistic as in our real lives we rarely have infallible knowledge. A mistaken approach to the cases which dismisses almost all we know.

Eliminate Luck Proposal Luck is one of the main reasons for resulting in the Gettier Cases. So if it is eliminated or reduced then higher chance for the belief to be right. However, this method has been quite vague. However, based on my understanding, scientific research can be considered such a method; the control of variables and having a controlled environment.

No False Evidence Proposal In the Smith case, why he came to the JTB yet not knowledge was because he heard that Jones was going to get the job. So if that piece of information was taken away, he would not have come to that conclusion. So JTB should be modified such that for the belief to be knowledge, the justification has to be true.