Skepticism, Rationalism & Empiricism. True, Justified, Belief Needs to be ALL 3: It can be true but not justified– you guessed correctly Justification.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Frontiers of Western Philosophy Empiricism
Advertisements

The Cogito. The Story So Far! Descartes’ search for certainty has him using extreme sceptical arguments in order to finally arrive at knowledge. He has.
Descartes’ rationalism
Meditations on First Philosophy
Charting the Terrain of Knowledge-1
RATIONALISM AND EMPIRICISM: KNOWLEDGE EMPIRICISM Epistemology.
Lecture Three “The Problem of Knowledge” Think (pp. 32 – 48)  Review last lecture  Descartes’ Clear and Distinct Ideas  “The Trademark Argument”  The.
Descartes on Certainty (and Doubt)
The Rationalists: Descartes Certainty: Self and God
Sources of knowledge: –Sense experience (empiricism) –Reasoning alone (rationalism) We truly know only that of which we are certain (a priori). Since sense.
Descartes on scepticism
Knowledge empiricism Michael Lacewing
How Claims of Knowledge Are Justified Foundationalism: knowledge claims are based on indubitable foundations –I can doubt whether there is a world, whether.
Epistemology: the study of the nature, source, limits, & justification of knowledge Rationalism: we truly know only that of which we are certain. Since.
Meditation Two Cogito Ergo Sum. Cogito #1 Cogito as Inference □ (Ti→Ei). Not: □ (Ei)
Results from Meditation 2
CHAPTER FIVE: THE SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE P H I L O S O P H Y A Text with Readings ELEVENTH EDITION M A N U E L V E L A S Q U E Z.
Lecture 7: Ways of Knowing - Reason. Part 1: What is reasoning? And, how does it lead to knowledge?
Descartes’ First Meditation
Knowledge, Skepticism, and Descartes. Knowing In normal life, we distinguish between knowing and just believing. “I think the keys are in my pocket.”
 According to philosophical skepticism, we can’t have knowledge of the external world.
Skepticism, Rationalism & Empiricism. Two important terms A priori : “prior to, before” Some ideas are true independent of, or “before” experience. Examples.
Rationalism and Empiricism
Philosophy of Mind Week 2: Descartes and Dualism
Rene Descartes 1596—1650. Some dates 1543: publication of Copernicus’s De Revolutionibus 1543: publication of Copernicus’s De Revolutionibus 1633: Galileo.
Epistemology Section 1 What is knowledge?
Descartes’ Meditations
Epistemology, Part I Introduction to Philosophy Jason M. Chang.
Descartes Meditations. Knowledge needs a foundation Descartes knows he has false beliefs, but he does not know which ones are false So, we need a method.
René Descartes ( AD) Meditations on First Philosophy (1641) (Text, pp )
René Descartes ( ) Father of modern rationalism.
Can you learn this? You have 2 minutes. Then you will try and write it down word for word “if you can conceive it to be possible for any mixture or combination.
So, you think you know your philosophers?
 Doubt- to be uncertain about something, to hesitate to believe  Dualism- the belief that the mind and body are separate (but interact). Mind is a kind.
Descartes' Evil Demon Hypothesis:
Varieties of Scepticism. Academic Scepticism Arcesilaus, 6 th scolarch of the Academy Arcesilaus, 6 th scolarch of the Academy A return to the Socratic.
Chapter 7 The Problem of Skepticism and Knowledge
René Descartes, Meditations Introduction to Philosophy Jason M. Chang.
Can you trust your senses?. WHAT DO YOU KNOW? AN INTRODUCTION TO SCEPTICISM.
Descates Meditations II A starting point for reconstructing the world.
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 10 Epistemology #3 (Berkeley)
Three Theories of Knowledge
Epistemology (How do you know something?)  How do you know your science textbook is true?  How about your history textbook?  How about what your parents.
1 John Locke’s Theory of Knowledge ( ). 2 Empiricist All knowledge is derived from experience.
An Outline of Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy
WEEK 4: EPISTEMOLOGY Introduction to Rationalism.
Knowledge and Skepticism
The Search for Knowledge
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Intuition and deduction thesis (rationalism)
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Skepticism.
Skepticism David Hume’s Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding and John Pollock’s “Brain in a vat” Monday, September 19th.
Descartes’ Meditations
O.A. so far.. Anselm – from faith, the fool, 2 part argument
Skepticism David Hume’s Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
Philosophy of Mathematics 1: Geometry
Major Periods of Western Philosophy
Rationalism.
Remember these terms? Analytic/ synthetic A priori/ a posteriori
On your whiteboard: What is empiricism? Arguments/evidence for it?
Major Periods of Western Philosophy
Problems with IDR Before the holidays we discussed two problems with the indirect realist view. If we can’t perceive the external world directly (because.
Rationalism: we truly know only that of which we are certain
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 7 Berkeley
Rene Descartes Father of Modern Philosophy b. March in La Haye France wrote Meditations in 1641 d. February
Philosophy Sept 28th Objective Opener 10 minutes
Meditation 2: The Nature of the Mind, which is Better Known than the Body Descartes Meditation I.
Descartes The Cogito.
Epistemology “Episteme” = knowledge “Logos” = words / study of
Presentation transcript:

Skepticism, Rationalism & Empiricism

True, Justified, Belief Needs to be ALL 3: It can be true but not justified– you guessed correctly Justification can be weak or strong…

According to Plato: A person S knows proposition P if & only if: P is true S believes P S is justified in believing P Gettier offers examples where: Someone forms a belief that is true & justified BUT does not qualify as knowing what they think they know Holding a truth can sometimes be luck!

Knowledge = justified true belief (Plato) The task: When are our beliefs justified? How are our beliefs justified?

Wanted to prevent skepticism from undermining all claims to knowledge Product of Reformation & Scientific Revolution Is he a skeptic? He does not want to be one… I noticed that while I was trying to think every thing false, it was necessary that I, who was thinking this, was something. And observing that this truth, “I am thinking, therefore I exist” was so firm and sure that all the most extravagant suppositions of the skeptics were incapable of shaking it…”

What if you are just a brain in a vat, connected to a computer that causes you to think that you are living a ‘normal’ life? (Hilary Putnam, 1981) Is everything you think about the world wrong? Descartes’ malin génie puts wrong ideas in your head… how do you know what is true or real? Descartes says: cogito ergo sum Putnam says the scenario is illogical because the envatted brain is invisible & indescribable from within… Convinced?

Genuine Knowledge is not possible All we have are beliefs Global skepticism = no knowledge of any kind is possible Local skepticism = there are some things we cannot know Some ways of acquiring beliefs cannot bring knowledge (dreams, psychics, astrology) The computer is so clever that it can even seem to the victim that he is sitting and reading these very words about the amusing but quite absurd supposition that there is an evil scientist who removes people’s brains from their bodies and places them in a vat of nutrients. ~ Hilary Putnam, Reason, Truth & History 1981

The Method of Doubt Reject any belief that can be doubted If an evil-demon is deceiving you, any of your ‘truths’ could be wrong What is left? Your mind! The evil demon…will never bring it about that I am nothing so long as I think that I am something.. I am, I exist, is necessarily true whenever it is put forward by me or conceived in my mind.

Knock down the faulty foundation, but then what? Descartes concludes that the things we see very clearly & distinctly are true Why? God

Use clear & distinct ideas to prove existence of God God gives us clear & distinct ideas We use those ideas to prove the existence of God God gives us clear & distinct ideas…..

Infers too much from cogito Thinking is going on, but who is doing the thinking? Limited to the first person Demon could trick me into thinking you are thinking Limited to present tense

British response to Continental Philosophers John Locke George Berkeley David Hume

Justification for knowledge comes from our senses Basic empirical beliefs are directly derived from experience They are therefore justified & count as evidence Example of a basic empirical belief: I see a red phone & so I believe there is a red phone in front of me

There are beliefs about things that are NOT directly observable Example: dinosaurs once existed Can see them or touch them now Inferential beliefs: bones, archaeological remains

If you can’t confirm or falsify with evidence …then you should be skeptical of this belief Examples: All men are created equal God wrote the Bible Empiricists tend to be skeptical about religion &moral knowledge

Locke says: Human understanding is like a closet wholly shut from light, with only some little openings left, to let in external visible resemblances, or ideas of things without.

Sound skeptical? Locke has a solution… Our perception might be unreliable, but it depends on what type of qualities we are perceiving… Take the red tomato… It’s redness is a product of the interaction of various factors (texture, surface, our sensory system, environment at the time) These properties don’t belong to the tomato Therefore secondary qualities

The tomato has some true qualities: size & shape These do not depend on the conditions under which it is observed Does not even require an observer These are primary qualities Locke thought primary qualities were proof against the skeptics doubts…

Accepts representational model of perception i.e.- seen objects are ideas But, he asks, how could you check on all this if you are in Locke’s closet?

Reality consists in the ideas or sensations themselves We are fully & properly connected with these! Skepticism averted! But… wait, is anything real? Berkeley says: to exist is to be perceived

Do things cease to exist the moment we stop looking at them? Berkeley says: Everything is conceived all the time in the mind of God So, the continual existence of the world is assured All the choir of heaven and furniture of earth - in a word, all those bodies which compose the frame of the world - have not any subsistence without a mind.

Agree with Empiricists that knowledge is based on basic beliefs BUT justification does not come from experience Justification comes from Pure Reason

We cannot see, feel or touch numbers So if we have a knowledge of numbers This knowledge cannot be based on experience Knowledge of numbers is based on Reason

Rationalists say… When we think about certain propositions we can quickly see that they are true These propositions have something self-evident about them Simple reflection shows that these propositions (beliefs) are likely to be true I believe that, if a triangle could speak, it would say... that God is eminently triangular, while a circle would say that the divine nature is eminently circular… ~ Baruch Spinoza

If one multiplies any natural number by 2 then the resulting number is even The income of the average worker in the US is higher than the income of the average worker in Europe Every state must have some form of government Every event has a cause. Sugar is sweet All human beings have the same fundamental rights All cats are animals If any nation should ever use nuclear weapons again, then millions of people will die

A priori Means from the former Used to refer to a justification that can take place prior to consulting empirical knowledge You can know something a priori if you can know it without 1 st seeing, touching or hearing anything in particular Examples: All red cars are colored cars All triangles have 3 sides

Just not any particular experience Example: In order to know that tigers are animals… I might have to look at a picture or see some BUT I don’t have to see any particular tiger

Associated with Empiricists Means from the latter Requires that we refer to specific experiences of the world Example: There are 9 planets in the solar system Dr. Ernst’s bike is green

I can know a priori that all bachelors are not married A fully committed empiricist holds that all our knowledge is justified a posteriori. It is impossible to know a priori whether New York has more inhabitants than Mexico City. I can know a priori that there is life on other planets. I can know a priori that if somebody is hot to death then somebody must have been the shooter. I can know a priori that all swans are white. All of mathematics is based on a priori reasoning.