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Title: Tonight


1
Tonight
2
2. Lecture Overview
  • 1. The Traditional Account and Gettier
  • 2. No False Premisses
  • 3. The Causal Theory of Knowing

3
1. The Traditional Account
S knows that p iff 1. p is true 2. S believes
that p 3. Ss belief that p is justified but is
the traditional account sufficient?
4
1. Gettier Counter-Examples
  • I. Smith believes
  • Jones will get the job and has 10 coins in his
    pocket
  • The person who gets the job has 10 coins in his
    pocket
  • But Jones does not get the job, and Smith has 10
    coins in his pocket.
  • Satisfies traditional account 1. (b) is true, 2.
    Smith believes (b), and 3. his belief is
    justified
  • but Smith does not know (b).

5
1. Gettier Counter-Examples
  • II. Smith believes
  • Jones owns a Ford
  • Jones owns a Ford or Brown is in Barcelona
  • But Jones does not own a Ford, and Brown is in
    Barcelona.
  • Satisfies traditional account 1. (b) is true, 2.
    Smith believes (b), and 3. his belief is
    justified
  • but Smith does not know (b).

6
1. Gettier Counter-Examples
  • S has a justified but false belief.
  • S uses the justified but false belief to form a
    justified true belief.
  • The true belief is justified, but not known.
  • Something has gone wrong. But what?

7
2. No False Premisses
  • S knows that p iff
  • 1. p is true
  • 2. S believes that p
  • 3. Ss belief that p is justified
  • 4. Ss belief that p is not based on any false
    premisses
  • Cf. M. Clark, Knowledge and Grounds, Analysis
    1963

8
2. Sufficient?
  • I. Smith believes
  • (p) there is a sheep in the field.
  • What Smith sees is a dog that looks like a sheep.
  • But there is a sheep in field, out of view.
  • So, Smiths belief (p) is true, Smiths belief is
    justified, but Smith doesnt know p.
  • Q does Smiths belief that p rest on any (false)
    premisses?

9
2. Sufficient?
  • II. Smith believes
  • (p) Jones owns a Ford
  • He was told this by Brown, a reliable witness. At
    the time, Browns information was correct
  • But Smith then sells his Ford and buys a
    Volkswagen. An hour later, he then wins a Ford in
    a raffle, so he now owns a Ford and Volkswagen.
  • 1. p is true 2. Smith believes p 3. Smiths
    belief that p is justified 4. Smiths belief
    that p is not based on any false premisses
    (Browns info correct at time)
  • but not knowledge

10
2. Necessary?
  • III. Smith believes
  • (p) someone in his office owns a Ford
  • Because he also believes
  • (q) Jones owns a Ford
  • (r) Jones works in his office
  • (s) Brown owns a Ford,
  • (t) Brown works in his office.
  • But (s) is false, hence not known. (Recall
    knowledge is a success term Nec, if S knows p,
    then p.)
  • So there is a false premiss...
  • but Smith still knows p!

11
3. The Causal Theory
  • Knowledge requires an appropriate causal
    connection between Ss belief that p and the fact
    that p
  • Smith causally unrelated to the fact that he has
    10 coins in his pocket
  • Smith causally unrelated to the real sheep in the
    field
  • Smiths belief that Jones owns a Ford now is
    causally unrelated to the fact that Jones won one
    in a raffle
  • Smith knows that someone in his office owns a
    Ford because he is causally connected to the fact
    that Jones owns a Ford.

12
3. The Causal Theory
  • S knows that p iff
  • 1. p is true
  • 2. S believes that p
  • 3. Ss belief that p is appropriately causally
    related to the fact that p.

13
3. The Causal Theory
  • Appropriate causal connections include
  • 1. Perception
  • 2. Memory
  • 3. Testimony
  • 4. Inference

14
3. The Causal Theory
  • 1. Weaker than traditional accounts
  • Internalist Theory of Knowledge you need to be
    able to say how you know.
  • Externalist Theory of Knowledge you dont need
    to be able to say how you know causal connection
    is sufficient.
  • but is this knowledge? E.g. Norman the
    clairvoyant. (See Week 4.)

15
3. The Causal Theory
  • 2. Counter-Example?
  • Henry is driving in fake barn country
  • Henry doesnt know this, and forms the belief
    there is a real barn in front of him.
  • In fact, this is the only real barn in the area,
    so he is appropriately causally related to a real
    barn...
  • but does he know there is a real barn in front
    of him?

16
Impressions?
  • Some possible responses
  • The counter-examples are silly and contrived
  • We havent found the right analysis yet
  • The question What is knowledge? is (in some
    sense) ill-conceived

17
Further Reading
  • There is lots written on this, including
  • Dancy, Jonathan. An Introduction to Contemporary
    Epistemology (Blackwell, 1985), Chapter 2
  • Steup, Mattius. The Analysis of Knowledge,
    Stanford Encylopedia of Philosophy (online).
  • Sturgeon, Scott. Knowledge, in A.C. Grayling
    (ed.), Philosophy 1 A Guide Through the Subject
    (Oxford University Press, 1998)

18
Recap
  • 1. The Structure of Gettier Counter-Examples
  • 2. No False Premisses
  • 3. The Causal Theory of Knowing
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