Title: Epistemology The Philosophy of Truth and Knowledge
1EpistemologyThe Philosophy of Truth and
Knowledge
2- Philosophy is the childhood of the intellect, and
a culture that tries to skip it will never grow
up. - Thomas NagelĀ (1937 - )
3Before Anything Else
- One must always concentrate on
- INTERPITATION
- Before
- EVALUATION
- Know what is require or asked before giving
claims and opinions
4Pronounce GHOTI
5The Nature of TRUTH
- "Truth is a hard deer to hunt. If you eat too
much truth at once, you may die of the truth. It
was not idly that our fathers forbade the Dead
Places." Benet http//www.tkinter.smig.net/Outings
/RosemountGhosts/Babylon.htm - Getting to the truth is indeed hard
- But what is the truth?
- And
- How much truth can we handle?
- Truth Knowledge the concern of
- EPISTEMOLOGY
6Certainty
- Are there limits of our knowledge?
- Can we humans expand our knowledge?
- Will we someday know everything?
- How do we come to know things?
- What is Truth?
- How do we know when we have the truth?
- Is any of this important?
7Varying Truth?
- Two Meanings
- Denotation dictionary meaning
- Connotation the contextual meaning
- Sensitivity to the Truth A wise man cannot be
insulted, for if what is said is true he takes it
as is, and if what is being said is false he
deals with it if he must or ignores it if he
should. - Sensitivity Insecurity
8Piaget and Truth
- Assimilation taking something new into your
mental schema, your Gestalt - Accommodation when something is so different
you have to change your mental schema to take it
in - He realize it was necessary to go through that
journey and find the truth Ghassan Ismail
9Basic Ideas of Epistemology
- Worlds Inner and Outer
- Inner world composed of concepts
- Compound Concepts Beliefs
- Beliefs True or False Correspondence .
to outside of
self - If uncertain opinion
- If certain KNOWLEDGE
10Distinction
- Concrete Ideas
- ideas that represent something real
- i.e.
- chairs, desks, hands, air, football players
- Abstract Ideas
- ideas that represent something made up
- i.e.
- justice, beauty, truth, the American way
-
11Distinction
12Distinction
- Quantity
- How much of a thing
- Vs.
- Quality
- Properties of a thing
13Distinction
- Substance the composition of the thing
- Vs.
- Form the shape and function of the thing
14Knowledge and Certainty
- To be known
- 1) must be a belief
- 2) must be true
- 3) must be justified
- KNOWLEDGE
- Justified
- True
- Belief
- (Plato)
- Problem
- How Justify?
- Why Certain?
15The Two Means of Justification
- EMPERICISM learn thru sensory experience and
through thinking -
RATIONALISM learn only thru thinking
Note Empiricists accept what Rationalists believe
16The Greeks
- Pre-Socratics thinkers who today would be
called scientists - Socrates applied logic to man/ considered
nature of beauty, truth, justice, i.e., abstract
ideas - Plato Rational Idealist thinker wrote down
Socrates ideas, then turned Socrates into his
mouthpiece school Academy - Aristotle Empiricist Materialist thinker
created modern logic and science attended
Academy school Lyceum - Alexandre the Great sent to Lyceum by Phillip,
his father used Aristotles ideal to conquer
known world
17(No Transcript)
18The Empiricists
19Aristotle (384-322 BCE)
- 1)We see a thing
- 2) We know what a thing is must see essence or
cannot know - 3) By induction, we generalize the type of thing
4) We know something like the thing by its
similar essence. - Problems 1) Ever seen an essence?
- 2) How do generalizations occur?
- 3) How apply?
20John Locke (1632-1704)
- 1) Tabula Rosa mind is born a Blank Table
(VS. innate ideas) - 2) Passive Mind mind that receives impressions/
Receives Sensations - Active Mind combines impression to think
- Analogies
- 3) Primary Qualities properties built in to
things/ - Secondary Qualities properties which depend on
receiver
21If Locke is Right Problem!!!
- Ego-centric Predicament cannot get out of head
to justify inner world to outer - ---- LOSE WORLD.
- Cannot justify what is anyone elses head matches
what is in our head - ----- LOSE COMMUNICATION/people
- Incl. Problem of the Inverted Spectrum
22David Hume (1711-1776) "Hume is our Politics,
Hume is our Trade, Hume is our Philosophy, Hume
is our Religion." This statement by 19th century
British idealist philosopher James Hutchison
Stirling
- Argued all beliefs come from senses
- Proof all that we know (Satan) is a
composite of sensory input material - To Know To Perceive
- All abstractions are singular
- dog, grandfather, house
23The Argument Form That Leads To
- 1) Everything I know I have ultimately learned
thru my senses if I have no sensation of
something then I cannot know of it. - 2) I have no sensation of the connection between
a cause and its effect - Therefore, I lose causation because I cannot see
the connection
24Problems Hume Points Out
- Causation cannot see the connection of cause
and effect lose causation - Substance cannot perceive things themselves,
only perception of things - lose the world
- ALL WE KNOW IS IMAGES
- Worst Mind cannot perceive that which receives
our self so lose me
25Summary of Empiricists
- People who argue that sense experience is a
legitimate means of knowledge - Aristotle the king argued we have to know
essence - Locke tabula rosa, active and passive minds,
qualities, then ego-centricism - Hume if learn all through senses, the lose
causality, substance, and mind - So, for many, empiricism leads to skepticism
26Consider SUBSTANCE very carefully
- Substance is what the world is made of, that
which underlies the world, what is real. - Matter / Mass / Molecules / Atoms whatever you
want to call it. - What is it????????
- ALL WE ACTUALLY KNOW IS SENSATIONS - what we
hear, feel, taste, smell not what causes the
sensations
27So Skepticism
- Skepticism is the belief that no knowledge is
- possible a result of Empiricism
28The Rationalists
29Can Rationalism be the Solution?
- Rationalism is the belief that only through
thinking can we derive truth
30Rationalism
31Platos Assertion
- The Problem with Learning
- IF we do not already know everything
- 1) How do we know what we are suppose to
learn? - 2) How will we know that we have learned it?
- OBVIOUSLY, we must already know everything
32How Plato Works
- The Doctrine of Recollection
- Before we were born we knew everything the
trauma of childbirth makes us forget all that we
know!!! - Learning, and, therefore, knowledge is nothing
more than recalling. - When we are young we need much stimulus to spark
recollection, but when older we need quiet to
allow recall.
33How This is All Possible
- PLATOS METAPHYSICALLY VIEW
- The Allegory of the Cave (Important Cultural
Heritage)
34Idealism
- Platos Epistemological solution depends on his
Metaphysical ideology - There is no physical reality!!!
- By eliminating physical things he rids himself of
the pesky problem of reality - We can be certain of what we think we know
because all that exist is what we think we know. - There are problems what do you think they are?
35Descartes an Attempt to Bring Back the World (a
four-part argument)
- 1) Cartesian Doubt an argument
- 1. Everything I know I have learned thru my
senses P - 2. If something fools you, do not trust it
P - 3. My senses have fooled me P
- 4. I cannot trust my senses from 2,3
- 5. I cannot trust anything I think I know
from 1,4 - Therefore, I must doubt everything from 5
- So COGNITO, ERGO, SUM
- I THINK, THEREFORE, I AM
- Also Dream Thesis, Brain in a vat, evil genius
36I think, therefore, I am
- From this one certainty, Descartes tries derive
the material world - 2) He begins by proving God exist
- The Ontological Argument for the Existent of God
- 1. Anything that exist is greater than anything
that does not exist - 2. God is conceived as the greatest of things
(Supreme Being)
- Therefore, God must exist (From the idea of God
God Exists)
37After he has Himself and God
- 3) Why senses appear to deceive
- 1. God is perfect
- 2. Deception is lying an imperfection
- 3. God, being perfect, would not build an
imperfect thing - Thus, we are not built where our senses fool us
- So, why does it appear that our senses fool us?
- Because our free-will (ability to decide) is
limitless, but our judgment (information) is
limited thus, we make decisions sans enough
information
38Descartes Final Solution
- 4) If we wait until our judgment catches up with
our will we will not make mistakes. - So, before saying we know anything we must
- Clearly and Distinctly Perceive It
- Thus, we get the world back and life is good
39Problems with Descartes
- 1) I think, therefore, I am
- is circular the fallacy of begging the
question - 2) Existent is not depended on conception, thus
God does not necessarily exist because of the
humans view Him - 3) If free-will is unlimited, then our knowledge
would also have to be unlimited before we could
decide anything - 4) How can know when we clearly and distinctly
perceive?
40So, perhaps the only way to know anything is to
give up the world
41Immanuel Kant22 April 1724 12 February 1804
- In Kants Critique of Pure Reason he made a
number of observations which I have used. He was
a German Idealist, not like me - Einstein told us about the universe in the 20th
century, but Kant told us about the mind of man
in the 17th
42Kants Critique of Pure Reason
- The Critique is a response to the questions that
Descartes, Hume, Leibniz, and other
contemporaries had posed about perception and
reality. Attacking the age-old question of
knowledge versus experience, Critique proposes
that all people are born with an inborn sense of
raw experiencea phenomenon that Kant dubbed
transcendental idealism. Whereas the
Enlightenment had been built around the idea that
man can discover the laws of nature with his
mind, Kant countered that it is the mind that
gives those laws to nature. In so doing, he
elevated skepticism to unfathomable heights,
cemented his place high atop the pantheon of
philosophy, and knocked the Enlightenment down a
few rungs. - SparkNotes
43- Kants work with skepticism perfectly sums up the
German Enlightenments mistrust of empiricism.
The Critique suggests that we all are born with
our own ideas and perceptions of the world and,
as such, can never know what is real and what
is our perception. In other words, reality is
in the eyes of the beholder. However, because
nothing really exists separate from its existence
in the eyes of the observer, then perceptions and
observations in the world cannot be trusted. As a
result, empirical evidence cannot be trusted
either. By thus stating that only a select few
universal truths in the world were valid
(SparkNotes)
44So, My Key Points
- First, We are not determined by our experiences,
- Rather, it is how we are built that determines
what we can experience. -
- We have experiences which change the way we are
built (mentally) which, in turn, determine what
we can experience.
45Key Points
- Second, Some concepts are built-in (innate), such
as black, and when we experience them they are
turned on inside our brains. - Kant - A Distinction types of knowledge
- a priori/Analytic known without experience,
and - a posteriori/Synthetic known thru experience
46Key Points
- Third, Logic is at the core of our structure
(V.W.M. Quine) - Sensation
- Perception
- Conception
- Logic
- World
47Key Points
- 4) Worlds (Kant)--
- Phenomenal experienced
- Nomenal underlying
48The interesting things about Kant is that, like
Einstein, he never empirically proved his ideas,
but, like Einstein,his ideas were proven by
others
49Noah Chomsky
- Syntactic Structures was a distillation of his
book Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory
(1955, 75) in which he introduces
transformational grammars. The theory takes
utterances (sequences of words) to have a syntax
which can be (largely) characterized by a formal
grammar in particular, a Context-free grammar
extended with transformational rules
50- Children are hypothesized to have an innate
knowledge of the basic grammatical structure
common to all human languages (i.e. they assume
that any language which they encounter is of a
certain restricted kind). This innate knowledge
is often referred to as universal grammar. It is
argued that modeling knowledge of language using
a formal grammar accounts for the "productivity"
of language with a limited set of grammar rules
and a finite set of terms, humans are able to
produce an infinite number of sentences,
including sentences no one has previously said.
Wikipedia
51So how do we know what is TRUE?
- Humanity and the universe are based on the same
floor plan LOGIC - Logic as you know it is expressed by mathematics,
which is used to describe all human knowledge
(George Boole in the 19th century showed us how
to say anything in math) - Thus, when we connect with the fabric of the
universe we can be certain of our experiences
52Further, Logical Empiricism works for
materialists and for idealists, also.So, what
we have to do now is explore METAPHYSICS