Godel show the that all inductive/axiomatic logic is incomplete, as you've indicated. — creativesoul
Math is not knowledge. Math is method. — creativesoul
Logic is not a measure of truth. — creativesoul
Logical proofs prove coherency. Coherency is not enough for truth. — creativesoul
Gettier said nothing about these concerns. They're irrelevant. — creativesoul
I also complete subscribe to Bertrand Russell's criticism on the coherence theory of truth. — alcontali
Sounds like you're a mathematician — creativesoul
physicist or something? — creativesoul
I reject Kant's notions of a posterior and a priori. — creativesoul
All thought/belief are existentially dependent upon sensory experience. — creativesoul
I knew I didn't have Godel quite right, but the gist(I thought) was that he was critiquing inductive logic/reasoning. — creativesoul
Don't use the quotation marks. — creativesoul
Is that not a problem then? Math is all about coherence. — creativesoul
I reject Kant's notions of a posterior and a priori. — creativesoul
All thought/belief are existentially dependent upon sensory experience. — creativesoul
I knew I didn't have Godel quite right, but the gist(I thought) was that he was critiquing inductive logic/reasoning. — creativesoul
Is that not a problem then? Math is all about coherence. — creativesoul
Gödel was critiquing inductive logic/reasoning. — creativesoul
Well, Kant just defines these things: a priori meaning without the use of sensory information and a posteriori, the opposite of that (i.e. empirical). — alcontali
Yes, but not coherence in the real, physical world. It is about constructing abstract, Platonic worlds that are coherent by design. — alcontali
Popular line of thought, but false on several levels.
We have some access to what's happened and/or is happening. That's all we need(assuming a meaningful claim) to check if the claim is true(or not). — creativesoul
It was polemic without much argument, yes. Fine. But you simply assertedRhetorical drivel based upon a gross misunderstanding of truth and the irrevocable role that it plays in all thought/belief and statements thereof, including your own — creativesoul
without explaining what this is, nor did you respond to the argument I made before that. Do you have anything but an assertion that I am wrong? Can you come down out of the clouds of abstraction, and explain what access to truth you mean, that would not be included in the category 'justification'? How do you divide up justification and access to truth? some specifics.We have some access to what's happened and/or is happening. That's all we need(assuming a meaningful claim) to check if the claim is true(or not). — creativesoul
Mathematics is pure symbol manipulation, i.e. language expressions. It does not take any sensory input. Therefore, it is pure reason. Kant criticized the practice in classical geometry (Euclid's Elements) to solve visual puzzles. So, he considered it not to be pure reason. Nowadays math is pretty much algebra only. So, Kant's issue with math has been addressed. — alcontali
Can you come down out of the clouds of abstraction, and explain what access to truth you mean, that would not be included in the category 'justification'? How do you divide up justification and access to truth? — Coben
Therefore, the JTB definition for knowledge is wrong. It must be JB instead.
This is the same conclusion as Gettier's, but obtained in a different way. — alcontali
Math consists of symbols made meaningful solely by virtue of our attribution. — creativesoul
All symbolic notation is existentially dependent upon common parlance. — creativesoul
Math is utterly irrelevant to the role that truth plays in all human thought/belief. — creativesoul
Math is irrelevant to this discussion — creativesoul
Hume works from the unspoken premiss that reason is somehow existentially independent of emotions. — creativesoul
All reason is existentially dependent upon emotion. — creativesoul
Thus... there is no such thing as 'Pure Reason' except and aside from being the name of a product(figment) of the Humean imagination. — creativesoul
That's not Gettier's conclusion. — Michael
I did not make that conclusion directly based on Gettier's work or examples, but on the argument in the debate.org discussion about JTB:
He wrote:
Simply put" Justified belief" is enough. As stated so clearly by Gettier, it is possible for a proposition to be simultaneously true and false in a similar way as Shrodingers cat can be both alive and dead before obtaining incontrovertible evidence to prove it is one or the other. Knowledge does not equal truth so to add that into the definition of knowledge is tenable. — alcontali
Who wrote this? Clearly not Gettier. Gettier himself didn't conclude that knowledge is justified belief. — Michael
This person is clearly someone with a background in physics. — alcontali
OK, but he clearly misunderstood Gettier because Gettier didn't conclude that knowledge is justified belief. Gettier only concluded, in his own words, that the JTB definition "does not state a sufficient condition for someone's knowing a given proposition." — Michael
Remember, in the first case, Smith was - by Gettier's own admission - justified in believing that he would get the job. Smith thought to himself "I am going to get the job". Smith believed that he had secured the job. That is to think of and/or about oneself, not another.
That sort of thought/belief is self-reflective. It cannot be about anyone else. It turned out to be quite false. Yet Gettier's sleight of hand was invoking the rules of entailment as his own justification for changing an undeniably self-reflective thought/belief into belief about someone else. That move is unjustifiable here.
"The man with ten coins in his pocket will get the job".<----------that is not a valid move for either Smith or Gettier. — creativesoul
Who said anything about access to truth? — creativesoul
Nope, I am not. I am looking at the specific model or definition of knowledge, JTB, and given the way it is used being critical of using the two adjectives justified and true. It is in that specfiic context, the way justification is used in contexts with JTB, that I think using true is problematic. There are other contexts where I have no problem with true and truth.You're attempting to dismiss, discard, and/or discount truth. That will not go unchallenged. — creativesoul
Remember, in the first case, Smith was - by Gettier's own admission - justified in believing that he would get the job. Smith thought to himself "I am going to get the job". Smith believed that he had secured the job. That is to think of and/or about oneself, not another.
That sort of thought/belief is self-reflective. It cannot be about anyone else. It turned out to be quite false. Yet Gettier's sleight of hand was invoking the rules of entailment as his own justification for changing an undeniably self-reflective thought/belief into belief about someone else. That move is unjustifiable here.
"The man with ten coins in his pocket will get the job".<----------that is not a valid move for either Smith or Gettier.
— creativesoul
a) I am a postman.
b) Mary is married to me.
c) Therefore, Mary is married to a postman.
Isn't this valid? — Michael
You're attempting to dismiss, discard, and/or discount truth. That will not go unchallenged.
— creativesoul
Nope, I am not. — Coben
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.