As I see it, if (1)(b) is logically possible, then (*) is coherent. That it seems to the subject that he's in state (a) (and (b) seems impossible to him) doesn't imply that he's in state (a). Which leaves (b) as a logical possibility. — Andrew M
Not had you eternally been in a dream, and had no sense of doubt due to everything in the world being the same as your level of knowledge about it. — Posty McPostface
In a dream everything is perfectly clear, there's no room for/to doubt the existence of the dream world itself because there is no room for doubt itself. — Posty McPostface
Therefore, if we take the evil demon path of assuming that everything can be doubted and nothing can be certain — Posty McPostface
Well, not quite. Because since the world and the self are the same thing in solipsism, then there can be no room for doubting the world since the self must exist. — Posty McPostface
Thus, the realist cannot assume that (2b) is true, where (2b) is that it is always logically possible that you are actually seeing your hands and are not deceived. — darthbarracuda
We have the same position here, i meant empirical verification only in the internal sense of methodological solipsism - as opposed to epistemological solipsism. In other words what is not cognizable in terms of first-person experiential phenomena is judged to be meaningless and lacking truth-value as opposed to being transcendentally right or wrong but unknowable. — sime
Unfortunately "mistakes" and "knowledge" in ordinary language are usually interpreted in terms of Truth-By-Correspondence, and this commonly held background assumption in conjunction with your "if" clause makes your paragraph read as if you at least concede to the dream-sceptic that the dream/reality distinction is logically conceivable in terms of T-B-C. — sime
In other words, Truth-by-correspondence about everything as a whole is neither right or wrong, but meaningless because it is unthinkable, so that neither skepticism nor non-skepticism in this sense is strictly meaningful. Isn't that the case? — sime
As i previously suggested, i suspect that some dream skeptics, possibly most of them, are implicitly defining the "dream vs reality" distinction in terms of the coherence and cohesiveness of their experiences - which is of course an entirely internal notion to experience that is both understandable and doesn't involve any Cartesian notion of transcendental truth-bearers beyond the individual's experience. — sime
Does one's working definitions of Waking and Dreaming reduce to immediate empirical contents, to non-immediate empirical implications, to both or to neither? — sime
Do the sets of experiences referred to by one's working definition of waking and dreaming overlap, or do waking and dreaming refer to disjoint sets of experiences? — sime
The idea that there is an objective reality independently of the mind, which you none the less, have access to is a contradiction, because reality can't be independent of you and yet you have access to it. — Mikkel
Reality is your experiences and your beliefs about how to make sense of it. There is no "The objective reality", because then subjectivity is not a part of reality. — Mikkel
That facts, evidence, truth, knowledge and so on matter to you is because, that it matters to you, is what makes it subjective. — Mikkel
Now I see a tree. That is non-inferential, I will accept that for now. But what that have to do with the objective reality? What do you mean by objective reality and how do you know that there is such a thing as an objective reality? — Mikkel
Now if you claim that hallucinations are not real, then I have to ask - How do you know that? — Mikkel
You have made a naive realistic claim - "You know that you perceive something by perceiving it, how else?", but you have given no evidence. — Mikkel
How do you know that is something and not an illusion? — Mikkel
That you are perceiving them!
How do you know that? — Mikkel
I don't know ;) how to get this across. It is pointless to point out that my argument about knowledge fails, if all arguments about knowledge fail. — Mikkel
That you believe you have knowledge, means you have knowledge? Is that your point? — Mikkel
Further you claimed that there are things, which are know non-inferentially, so would you please explain, how you know that? — Mikkel
What you said was this: "I know, that you can know many things non-inferentially."
For which I answer: "How do you know that?" — Mikkel
When you claim something, you ask yourself how you know that. Then you make a reasoned argument about that — Mikkel
because all such claims run into Agrippa's Trilemma. — Mikkel
It is funny though that you can't spot the problem in your own claim to knowledge. — Mikkel
They say nothing about doubt or knowledge. They only say that it's more likely that we're simulations or Boltzmann brains. — Michael
No, evidence is apprehended as being correlated with the belief which it is evidence for. So you have two things wrong here. First, the thing which the evidence is evidence of, is a belief it is not a fact. It cannot be called a fact, because the purpose of evidence is to convince someone of something which may or may not be true. Second, in order for it to be called evidence, it need not be intimately related to the belief, it needs only to be perceived as such. This is what makes it evidence of the thing, the fact that it is perceived as being related to the thing, whether or not it actually is, is irrelevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
This doesn't make any sense to me. You seem to be using "justify" in a strange way. We often claim to know something when someone we trust has told us that. But this is not at all a form of justification. So we often claim to know something, and have a reason for making such a claim, yet that reason doesn't constitute justification. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've already told you, as well as javra has told you, that this is a misrepresentation of skepticism. In my last post, I clearly pointed out, in your own argument, how what you say here is not true to your argument. — Metaphysician Undercover
The argument, as you presented it, is that if knowing something requires absolute certainty, then we do not know anything. It does not say that you cannot know anything unless you are absolutely certain. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's a ridiculous definition of "evidence". Evidence supports a belief it does not render it impossible that the belief is false. That's why to convince someone of something it usually requires more than one piece of evidence. If evidence for a belief rendered the belief necessarily true, then all that would be required would be one piece of flimsy evidence and the belief would necessarily be true. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you misunderstand skepticism. The skeptic doesn't claim that our confidence ought to be zero, the skeptic claims that the confidence cannot be one hundred percent. And, since we cannot have absolute, one hundred percent confidence in any claim of knowledge, all knowledge ought to be doubted. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, I think you misrepresent skepticism. The skeptic does not think that the belief is entirely without grounds, the skeptic thinks that the grounds for the belief ought to be examined. — Metaphysician Undercover
But very often people mistake shrubs for trees, and trees for shrubs. It is a common mistake. A small tree might be mistook for a shrub, and a shrub might be mistook for a small tree. How do you rule out this possibility for error unless you know that the person is adept in this type of judgement? — Metaphysician Undercover
Skepticism is not a claim that knowledge is "completely groundless". It is the claim that the grounds are just as likely to be mistaken as anything else is. — Metaphysician Undercover
What would be the point in lowering the standards for knowledge? You seem to think that this would get rid of the skeptic, but actually the reverse is true. If the standards are lowered, we can say P is knowledge when we have a lower degree of certainty of P. This means more cases of what is called knowledge turning out to be false, giving us more reason to be skeptical of anything which is called knowledge. — Metaphysician Undercover
The argument concludes "no p can be known". It defines "know" as ruling out the possibility of error, in premise 1. The argument says nothing about degrees of confidence in one's belief. The skeptic doesn't say, as you claim, that we can have zero confidence, the skeptic says that if "knowing" requires ruling out the possibility of error, as per premise 1, then we cannot know anything. This does not say that we cannot have any confidence in our beliefs. It says something about the nature of "knowing". — Metaphysician Undercover
To found my statements in fact, both Plato and Hume held that there is an external world. Both were staunch philosophical skeptics, rather than parodies of what philosophical skepticism entails. — javra
The underlined portion of the quote is exactly what the (philosophical) skeptic is saying: that there is no absolute certainty, knowledge, or truth that we can apprehend, only optimal approximations of absolute certainty, absolute knowledge, or absolute truth - which is not the same as not having standards at all. — javra
My point, is that the evidence, your perception of a tree, never provides the basis for a conclusion which beyond the possibility of doubt. If you exclude all the cases in which you were wrong, i.e. it turned out to be a shrub or something like that and not a tree, to support your claim that the judgement is beyond doubt, then you are being unrealistic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since "knowledge" as you use it refers to a successful judgement, and you have no way of knowing whether your judgement is successful or not, because you acknowledge that your judgement is fallible, then you have no way of knowing whether your judgements are knowledge or not. Therefore you should doubt all your knowledge. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how you can make this conclusion. A person in a waking state may have poor eyes, poor judgement, or be hallucinating when thinking that they are in a state of perceiving a tree. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem to be neglecting the fact that evidence must be judged. The person must judge the perceptual evidence, as well as the meaning of the statement "that is a tree", in order to know that that is a tree. Human judgements can be mistaken. Therefore the person can be wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
So here you use "objectively entail" to refer to the judgement which must be made. How do you ensure that the human judgement is not mistaken? — Metaphysician Undercover