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Questions tagged [knowledge]

Knowledge is a familiarity with someone or something, which can include facts, information, descriptions, or skills acquired through experience or education.

3 votes
1 answer
171 views

Russell famously argued that knowledge by acquaintance is possible and that it has the following features: It is direct awareness of an object, without inference. It is non-propositional and non-...
Ian's user avatar
  • 2,030
0 votes
1 answer
78 views

I've been contemplating about this questions for decades now, and finally came into conclusions in the form of philosophical framework called Cogito Praesens. I'm seeking a good, but simple ...
HAMDANI YUSUF's user avatar
-4 votes
3 answers
160 views

I don't know a lot about this question. It occurred to me that maybe our thirst for knowledge and our capacity for knowledge it seems don't match. How much more does humanity needs to "know"...
Ashish Shukla's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
208 views

Say that I know why the caged tardigrade screams, KyS. Say that I know why pineapple on pizza is the key to unlocking the secrets of the universe, KyU. Then Ky(S & U)? My first reaction to this ...
Kristian Berry's user avatar
1 vote
6 answers
896 views

Truth does not become consensus — it is reflected in it. And the more perfect the truth, the more imperfect its human translation will be. — Felipe M. Muniz, The Quality of Truth Throughout history, ...
felipe muniz's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
58 views

In Philosophical Explanations (1981), Robert Nozick proposes a tracking theory of knowledge that replaces the traditional “justified true belief” model with modal conditions meant to explain how ...
이준현's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
66 views

I’ve been readying Robert Nozick’s tracking theory of knowledge from Philosophical Explanations (1981), and I’m trying to understand whether his fourth condition — often called the adherence condition ...
이준현's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
158 views

If someone asks me, "Did you throw that beer can there?", I can say, "No, not to my knowledge." This means that I acknowledge the fallibility of my own knowledge. According to my ...
Julius Hamilton's user avatar
4 votes
7 answers
437 views

By "advanced knowledge", I mean knowledge that is not provable by the scientific or logical methods of the time. For example, if primitive people knew about the supercontinent Pangea or knew ...
user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
504 views

Let's leave aside the cartesian doubt as source of certainty about the ontological existence of ourselves. Let's focus again on the doubt. The doubt is not a self-sufficient, transcendental, living-in-...
Lawrence Patriarca's user avatar
-1 votes
2 answers
172 views

In everyday conversation, we say things like "I know I have hands", or "I know London is the capital of England". However, strictly speaking, do we really know those things? After ...
user107952's user avatar
9 votes
19 answers
2k views

Knowledge has often been defined as justified true belief. However, some people argue that this account is insufficient and have proposed additional conditions. This suggests that many scholars are ...
pmpmpmpi's user avatar
  • 167
5 votes
4 answers
482 views

This is in an essay (Knowledge and Skepticism by Robert Nozick) which tries to modify the definition of knowledge as justified true belief. The four conditions for knowledge discussed are the ...
pmpmpmpi's user avatar
  • 167
2 votes
5 answers
486 views

Suppose we have 2 competing theories X and Y. Now suppose theory X is confirmed (per Bayesian Confirmation Theory) and Y is disconfirmed, when are we justified in saying “we know X is true”? Is there ...
George Jostar's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
104 views

Charmides contains the following passage May we assume then, I said, that wisdom, viewed in this new light merely as a knowledge of knowledge and ignorance, has this advantage:—that he who possesses ...
Victory Omole's user avatar

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