How do we distinguish the difference between reality and a perfect
simulation of reality that has no distinguishable difference?
We Don't !!! — PL Olcott
We know that every element of the set of semantic tautologies is true.
AKA self-evident truth. — PL Olcott
Everything else is at best a reasonably plausible estimate of knowledge.
Or we could say that it functions as if it was true. — PL Olcott
If synthetic knowledge does not actually exist and I have correctly
shown that it does not, then this corrects mere presumptions to the
contrary, thus objectively is progress. — PL Olcott
With valid reasoning the premises are assumed to be true even if they
are false. — PL Olcott
(1) It definitely true that synthetic knowledge actually does not exist. — PL Olcott
If we are living in a perfect simulation of reality like the brain-in-a-vat
thought experiment then all of our knowledge of physical realty is false
because physical reality does not exist. — PL Olcott
The synthetic side of the analytic / synthetic distinction simply assumes
that physical reality exists. Because it is possible that this is false then
there cannot be 100% certain knowledge of physical reality. — PL Olcott
A deductive argument is sound if and only if it is both valid, and all of its premises are actually true. — PL Olcott
The the Gettier issues would seem to only involve making sure that
our physical sensations actually do correctly map to the correct elements
in the model of the actual world. — PL Olcott
You did not bother to notice that an argument can be valid
even if its premsies are false. — PL Olcott
"Truth cannot be a necessary component of knowledge."
How so? — PL Olcott
I went back through what you said and your position seems to be
that because there are cases where we cannot possibly confirm
that a belief is definitely true we should construe these cases as
knowledge even when they might be false. — PL Olcott
When knowledge is defined as a justified true belief such that the justification necessitates the truth of the belief then the Gettier problem is no longer possible. — PL Olcott
If you define knowledge as something like certain true belief, as you seem to, then it would be immune to Gettier problems, but as a consequence much of what we think of as knowledge isn’t actually knowledge, and that might be an untenable consequence. — Michael
I drive down a forest road and see a bear beside it in the distance. No, as I approach it I see it is merely a small tree. What is so profound about this sort of thing? — jgill
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