Epistemology Section 1 What is knowledge?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How do we know what exists?
Advertisements

Meditation IV God is not a Deceiver, Truth Criterion & Problem of Error.
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.
The Role of God in the Meditations (1) Context
© Michael Lacewing Scepticism Michael Lacewing
Descartes’ rationalism
Descartes’ rationalism
René Descartes ( ) Father of modern rationalism. Reason is the source of knowledge, not experience. All our ideas are innate. God fashioned us.
Meditations on First Philosophy
Bigquestions.co.uk1 meditation 3, the trademark argument perfection.
Charting the Terrain of Knowledge-1
RATIONALISM AND EMPIRICISM: KNOWLEDGE EMPIRICISM Epistemology.
1.Why does Descartes want certainty? 2.What area of philosophy was Descartes concerned with? 3.Explain the differences between the sceptical approach and.
Lecture Three “The Problem of Knowledge” Think (pp. 32 – 48)  Review last lecture  Descartes’ Clear and Distinct Ideas  “The Trademark Argument”  The.
Descartes on Certainty (and Doubt)
The Rationalists: Descartes Certainty: Self and God
Sources of knowledge: –Sense experience (empiricism) –Reasoning alone (rationalism) We truly know only that of which we are certain (a priori). Since sense.
Descartes on scepticism
Knowledge empiricism Michael Lacewing
René Descartes The father of modern Western philosophy and the epistemological turn Methodological doubt, his dreaming argument and the evil.
Epistemology: the study of the nature, source, limits, & justification of knowledge Rationalism: we truly know only that of which we are certain. Since.
Meditation Two Cogito Ergo Sum. Cogito #1 Cogito as Inference □ (Ti→Ei). Not: □ (Ei)
Results from Meditation 2
Descartes’ Epistemology
Descartes’ First Meditation
 According to philosophical skepticism, we can’t have knowledge of the external world.
© Michael Lacewing Reason and experience Michael Lacewing
Descartes & Rationalism
Rene Descartes 1596—1650. Some dates 1543: publication of Copernicus’s De Revolutionibus 1543: publication of Copernicus’s De Revolutionibus 1633: Galileo.
Descartes’ Meditations
Descartes Meditations. Knowledge needs a foundation Descartes knows he has false beliefs, but he does not know which ones are false So, we need a method.
René Descartes ( AD) Meditations on First Philosophy (1641) (Text, pp )
Meditation 6. Trusting the Senses The senses certainly appear real. Rejects God or himself as the source of sense impression & concludes they are real.
René Descartes ( ) Father of modern rationalism.
Can you learn this? You have 2 minutes. Then you will try and write it down word for word “if you can conceive it to be possible for any mixture or combination.
Epistemology ► Area of Philosophy that deals with questions concerning knowledge ► Philosophy of Knowledge.
René Descartes ( AD) Meditations on First Philosophy (1641) (Text, pp ) Revised, 8/20/15.
Chapter 7 The Problem of Skepticism and Knowledge
René Descartes, Meditations Introduction to Philosophy Jason M. Chang.
Descates Meditations II A starting point for reconstructing the world.
Epistemology ► Area of Philosophy that deals with questions concerning knowledge ► Philosophy of Knowledge.
Argument From Dreaming. 1 This is the second sceptical argument – the second wave of doubt, after the argument from illusion – senses cannot be trusted.
René Descartes Brandon Lee Block D.
Lauren Dobbs “Cogito ergo sum”. Bio  Descartes was a French born philosopher from the 1600’s.  He’s most famous for his “Meditations on First Philosophy”
Chapter 3: Knowledge The Rationalist’s Confidence: Descartes Introducing Philosophy, 10th edition Robert C. Solomon, Kathleen Higgins, and Clancy Martin.
An Outline of Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy
Epistemology: Theory of Knowledge Question to consider: What is the most reliable method of knowing?
WEEK 4: EPISTEMOLOGY Introduction to Rationalism.
DESCARTES: MEDITATION 3 OR: THE WORLD REGAINED — WITH CERTAINTY(?)
The Search for Knowledge
Meditation Three Of God: That He Exists.
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Intuition and deduction thesis (rationalism)
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Meditation Two Cogito Ergo Sum.
Descartes’ proof of the external world
Major Periods of Western Philosophy
March, 26, 2010 EPISTEMOLOGY.
On your whiteboard: What is empiricism? Arguments/evidence for it?
Major Periods of Western Philosophy
Rationalism: we truly know only that of which we are certain
On your whiteboards: 3 differences between philosophical scepticism and everyday incredulity What is meant by “infinite regress”? Why is it a problem.
Rene Descartes Father of Modern Philosophy b. March in La Haye France wrote Meditations in 1641 d. February
Philosophy Sept 28th Objective Opener 10 minutes
Meditation 2: The Nature of the Mind, which is Better Known than the Body Descartes Meditation I.
Meditation Two Cogito Ergo Sum.
Meditation Three Of God: That He Exists.
Epistemology “Episteme” = knowledge “Logos” = words / study of
God is not a Deceiver, Truth Criterion & Problem of Error
Descartes and Hume on knowledge of the external world
Presentation transcript:

Epistemology Section 1 What is knowledge? Why are knowledge claims a problem in Philosophy? Can knowledge claims be justified?

Epistemology Section 1 What is knowledge? The distinction between knowing ‘how’ and knowing ‘that’. Tripartite theory (justified, true, belief) The difference between knowledge, belief and certainty

Epistemology Section 1 Why are knowledge claims a problem in Philosophy? The difference between appearance and reality (Plato’s simile of the cave’ / Matrix) Problems with the Tripartite theory Accidental correctness (Gettier) The problem of justification (challenge of scepticism) Infinite regress of justification Unreliability of the senses Limitations of reason

Epistemology Section 1 Can knowledge claims be justified? (Responses to scepticism) Rationalism (e.g. Descartes, Plato) Innate ideas Senses are unreliable Self-evident truths can be grasped by the mind without reference to the senses Reason is the most reliable source of knowledge about the world

Epistemology Section 1 Can knowledge claims be justified? (Responses to scepticism) Problems with rationalism … Can only give us indirect knowledge about concepts A priori truths tell us nothing important about the world Problems with innate ideas

Epistemology Section 1 Can knowledge claims be justified? (Responses to scepticism) Empiricism (e.g. Hume, Aristotle) The mind as tabula rasa Experience as the source of all ideas (concepts) Reason can only give logical connections between ideas not knowledge about the world Only experience gives us knowledge about the world.

Epistemology Section 1 Can knowledge claims be justified? (Responses to scepticism) Problems with Empiricism The difference between appearance and reality How do we do that our mental representation correspond to reality? How can we deal with the problem of radical doubt?

Epistemology Section 2 Option A: Descartes’ Rationalism Or Option B: Hume’s Empiricism

Descartes’ Rationalism Searching for a reliable foundation for knowledge Reason as the foundation of knowledge: Refuting sceptical arguments:

Descartes’ Rationalism Searching for a reliable foundation for knowledge. Aim of the Meditations … How is Descartes going to achieve his aim? (Sceptical Method) Authorities as a foundation of knowledge? A posteriori truths as a foundation of knowledge? A priori truths as a foundation of knowledge?

Descartes’ Rationalism Searching for a reliable foundation for knowledge. A posteriori truths as a foundation of knowledge? Mistrust of the senses Med. I Failed me in the past … Perceptual illusions … Maybe I’m mad? The Dream argument Med. I Hypothetical possibility Extreme argument against a posteriori knowledge Maths / external world survive

Descartes’ Rationalism Searching for a reliable foundation for knowledge. A priori truths as a foundation of knowledge? The Evil Genius argument Med. I Hypothetical possibility Extreme argument against a priori knowledge Makes sure he avoids slipping back into old habits Allows him to ‘turn his will in the opposite direction’ If anything survives this he can truly say that he has found certainty Everything is lost …

Descartes’ Rationalism 2. Reason as the foundation of knowledge: The Cogito Med. II Non-analytical self-evident truth It’s a self-authenticating statement (true every time it is conceived by the mind) It’s self-contradictory to say “I don’t exist” Survives even the demon argument ‘Thinking’ survives whereas nothing based on sense experience does Opens the way to his mind/body dualism It is the one indubitable certainty that can act as a foundation for all others.

Descartes’ Rationalism 2. Reason as the foundation of knowledge: God as the guarantor of clear and distinct perceptions Med. III Clear and distinct perception / rule Trademark argument for God’s existence The idea of God includes the notion that he is benevolent If God is good he would not deceive us Clear and distinct perceptions must be true since a good God wouldn’t allow this level of deception

Descartes’ Rationalism 3. Refuting sceptical arguments: Med. VI God is no deceiver therefore material reality exists Errors in sense perception can be recognised and corrected Refuting the dream argument

Descartes’ Rationalism 3. Refuting sceptical arguments: God is no deceiver therefore material reality exists Med. VI Strategy relies on clear and distinct rule / proof that God exists and is good. Physical objects: are not subject to Descartes’ will are extended whereas the mind is unextended These objects can’t originate, therefore, in the imagination … Where then do they come from?

Descartes’ Rationalism 3. Refuting sceptical arguments: God is no deceiver therefore material reality exists Med. VI We passively receive ideas of outside objects, so there must be an external cause to the ideas. The only possible cause of these ideas are the external objects themselves, or God, or the demon. God exists and is good, therefore, he wouldn’t allow us to think these ideas were caused by external objects unless they actually existed

Descartes’ Rationalism 3. Refuting sceptical arguments: Errors in sense perception can be recognised and corrected Med. VI Strategy relies on clear and distinct rule / proof that God exists and is good. Difference between the imagination and the intellect Imagine a chiliagon Use the intellect to understand a chiliagon Imagination and the intellect are distinct faculties of the mind Imagination deals with images of material things Intellect deals with a priori truths

Descartes’ Rationalism 3. Refuting sceptical arguments: Errors in sense perception can be recognised and corrected Med. VI There is an outside world but is it like that reported by my senses? Primary / Secondary qualities Secondary (apparent) qualities (colour, smell, taste) Originate in sensation Subject matter of the imagination Obscure and confused perception (prone to error) Do not exist in the object (appear only in the perceiving mind) Primary (or real) qualities (shape, position, size, number) Subject matter of mathematics Understood in the intellect Perceived clearly and distinctly Exist in the objects (inherent features of matter itself)

Descartes’ Rationalism 3. Refuting sceptical arguments: Errors in sense perception can be recognised and corrected Med. VI For example ‘Grass is green’, we should say ‘Grass stimulates sensations of green in us’ ‘The tower is small’ – we should say ‘the tower simply appears small and my memory and other faculties can confirm its true size’. God equips us with various faculties: Reason, the senses, memory. I now see it is ‘…impossible that there could be any falsity in my opinions which couldn’t be corrected by some faculty supplied by God’. Some things which my senses appear to be telling me are in fact a misjudgement of reason However, with a careful use of clear reasoning we can correct the errors in sense perception.

Descartes’ Rationalism 3. Refuting sceptical arguments: Refuting the dream argument Med. VI

Problems with Descartes’ Rationalism Problems with the sceptical method … Problems with the cogito … Descartes’ arguments rely on a good God Descartes’ appeal to the clear and distinct rule What might seem clear and distinct might not be true at all Logical error … Cartesian circle …