Skeptic: Someone who knows he knows nothing.
Ignoramus: Someone who knows nothing. — Agent Smith
The central theme of all such Hollywood productions: AI gains self-awareness. — Agent Smith
:up:The truth is located in the behaviour. — Tom Storm
Skeptic: Someone who knows he knows nothing. — Agent Smith
Skeptic: Knows one and only one thing viz. that he know nothing. — Agent Smith
Sceptic: I know that I am ignorant of most knowable things, whatever I do know most of which I'm not certain of and, frustratingly, even my few certainties could still be false – ergo, with sufficient grounds, I question myself and others who do not. (re: "a sad Socrates")
Ignoramus: I do not want to know that (what) I do not know; therefore, 'illusions of knowledge' suffice – I'm content. (re "satisfied swine") — 180 Proof
Pyrrhonists view ataraxia as necessary for bringing about eudaimonia (happiness) for a person,[3] representing life's ultimate purpose.[4] — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ataraxia#Pyrrhonism
I believe that people say what they mean. If Socrates said "I know nothing" he meant he knew nothing. — god must be atheist
You had me as a reference but you did not quote the part you found pertinent. — god must be atheist
Socrates was totally wrong. [...] — god must be atheist
I think we think too much into texts. If he wanted to say that you think Socrates really wanted to say, he could have said that. Not to disparage you, but you said that. Why could then Socrates not say that?
I believe that people say what they mean. If Socrates said "I know nothing" he meant he knew nothing. — god must be atheist
"I know that I know nothing" is a saying derived from Plato's account of the Greek philosopher Socrates. Socrates himself was never recorded as having said this phrase, and scholars generally agree that Socrates only ever asserted that he believed that he knew nothing, having never claimed that he knew that he knew nothing. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_know_that_I_know_nothing
Skeptic: Someone who pretends they know nothing but acts as if they do.
Ignoramus: Someone who pretends they know something but acts as if they don't.
The truth is located in the behaviour. — Tom Storm
we are not so special. — Tom Storm
Sceptic: I know that I am ignorant of most knowable things, whatever I do know most of which I'm not certain of and, frustratingly, even my few certainties could still be false – ergo, with sufficient grounds, I question myself and those others who do not. (re: "a sad Socrates")
Ignoramus: I do not want to know that (what) I do not know; therefore, 'illusions of knowledge' suffice – I'm content. (re "satisfied swine")
Robot-mode: GIGO. (Only hazardous when programmed / operated by ignoramuses e.g. politicians, managers, bureaucrats, clergy, et al.) — 180 Proof
I think Socrates was just bitter he couldn't know everything, so he chose the next best thing. — john27
"I know that I know nothing" is a saying derived from Plato's account of the Greek philosopher Socrates. Socrates himself was never recorded as having said this phrase, and scholars generally agree that Socrates only ever asserted that he believed that he knew nothing, having never claimed that he knew that he knew nothing. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_know_that_I_know_nothing
Did he say "I believe I know nothing"? Did he? DID HE??? He said "I KNOW nothing". There is no mention of belief there.That he believed he knew nothing is not a contradiction, — javra
Socrates was totally wrong. He knew some things. He did not know everything, but he was far from knowing nothing.
I wonder why he would want to undermine his own reputation by an obviously false declaration of how things are. — god must be atheist
Maybe Socrates wanted to send a message - exercise caution - and if it meant resorting to hyperbole, so be it! — Agent Smith
:grin: Skeptic mode, eh? — Agent Smith
they lynch you. — god must be atheist
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