Lecture 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Three ingredients to knowledge?

A
  • truth
  • justification
  • belief
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2
Q

The realists beleives that

A

there is only one truth

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3
Q

The Coherence Model of Truth

A

A proposition is true if it is coherent with a system well supported propositions; otherwise it is false

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4
Q

from a coherence point of view, a statement is false if…

A

A stament is false if it’s incoherence with your well supported system of beliefs

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5
Q

When is a true proposition

A

A propostion is true when it describes things as they actually are. A true proposition corresponds to the facts

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6
Q

When is a proposition false

A

a proposition is false when it fails to describe things as they actually are. A false proposition does not correspond to the facts.

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7
Q

Can a proposition be true and false at the same time?

A

Every propostion has exactly one truth- value (at a given time). It’s either true, false, but not both

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8
Q

What is correspondence model

A

looking at the facts

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9
Q

How can we check that our whole system of beliefs corresponds to the facts?

A
  • step outside the beleifs to check if your beleifs correspond to reality
  • remove all bias
  • external view
  • impossible to survey all your beliefs
  • we phone somebody and ask somebody to check
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10
Q

Drawbacks of the Correspondence Model of truth

A

Correspondence model can’t claim anything about the future to be true, because it hasn’t happened yet

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11
Q

Belief and disbelief come in….

A

Belief and disbleief come in varying degrees of strength

  • beleive with confidence
  • disbelief with confidence
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12
Q

Principle of rational Belief

A
  • if there is evidence, the rational thing to do is to support it
  • If the evidence suggests that it’s false then disbelieve
  • If the person’s evidence is neutral, suspend judgement
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13
Q

strength of evidence

A

It is rational to proportion the confidence to the strength of evidence

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14
Q

Fallibilism

A

The view that a belief can be rational even though it is false

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15
Q

How much Evidence should you have for something to be rational?

A
  • enough evidence depending on context
  • based on the stakes, you will require more evidence
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16
Q

Some ways that beliefs can be Irrational

A
  • motivational errors
  • Failing to weigh all the available evidence properly
  • giving too much weight to memorable, striking, or vivid evidence
17
Q

What is evidence?

A

Information pertaining to the truth or falsify of a proposition