Let’s play
What’s that word!!!
Directions Get into your groups (see wiki) One person is the scribe. Number a piece of paper from 1-13 Everyone else has to help – HAVE YOUR BOOKS READY A slide will come up with the definition of a key concept from the Nature of Knowledge – write the correct word There will be a word bank at the bottom of the page
blindly accepting what we are told without thinking about it Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
Knowledge by authority - another name for second-hand knowledge Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
presents stories that are biased (bad news, extraordinary news, relevant news) Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
specialized; relied on to justify our knowledge claims; fallible Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
Winners are people who win, The fourth course are winners Therefore…
The Fourth course are winners!
circulated widely on the internet; usually have no basis in fact Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
knowledge gained from experience Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
facts which are not necessarily connected; the "bricks" (if knowledge is the "building"), cannot have knowledge without it Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
source of knowledge from other people Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
Ganadores
knowledge that is not exhausted by a short definition, can only be understood through experience and reflection Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
whether or not you are justified for saying that you know something depends on this Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
way of passing beliefs from one generation to the next Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
concerns how a curriculum is taught, does not teach students to question or critically examine Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
The definition of knowledge Authority worship Context Culture Expert opinion Indoctrination Information Justified true belief Knowledge by authority News media Primary knowledge Thick concept Second-hand knowledge Urban legend
Statements or assumptions that lead to a logical conclusion, often independent of sense experience
A school of thought, in which reason is the most important source of knowledge
The word for a logical argument in deductive reasoning
This refers to the quantity being referred to in a syllogism
The last part of a syllogism, arrived at logically
Reasoning from the general to the specific
Concerned with whether conclusions follow the premises, independent of truth/falsity of the premises
Applies to the content of the premises
An invalid pattern of reasoning
Tendency to agree with the conclusion, but doesn’t mean the argument is a good one or valid
This can be used to decide if an argument is valid, but is not always helpful
An incomplete argument – it is assumed that a premise is obvious and therefore may not be explicitly stated ex) Graham is a politician so he is probably lying
Reasoning from the general to the particular
A type of bias in which people tend to remember only evidence that supports their beliefs, and forget evidence that goes against them