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Section 7.3 What Do You Know? Knowing What Knowledge Is McGraw-Hill © 2013 McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights Reserved.
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7.3-2 Traditional Analysis of Knowledge Knowledge is justified true belief. S knows a proposition P if and only if: P is true, S believes that P is true, and S is justified in believing that P is true.
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7.3-3 Gettier’s Guy in Barcelona Suppose Smith has strong evidence for the claim that Jones owns a Ford but doesn’t know where his friend Brown is. So he concludes that (h) Either Jones owns a Ford or Brown is in Barcelona. It turns out that Jones does not own a Ford, but Brown is in Barcelona. Even though Smith is justified in believing (h), he doesn’t know (h).
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7.3-4 The Defeasibility Theory Knowledge is undefeated justified true belief. Diagnosis of the Gettier problem: there is additional evidence which, if known, would defeat the knowledge claim.
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7.3-5 Thought Experiment: Lehrer and Paxson’s Demented Mrs. Grabit Suppose Lehrer sees someone who looks like Tom Grabit steal a book from the library. Mrs. Grabit, however, testifies that it was his twin brother John who stole the book. This piece of evidence defeats your claim (d) that Tom stole the book. But unbeknownst to you, Mrs. Grabit is a compulsive liar. So you do know (d) despite the defeaters.
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7.3-6 The Causal Theory Knowledge is suitably caused true belief. Diagnosis of the Gettier problem: what makes the claim true is not what caused the person to believe it.
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7.3-7 Thought Experiment: Goldman’s Fake Barns Suppose that Henry is driving through the countryside and points out to his son “That’s a barn.” Suppose it is a barn, but suppose further that there are a number of fake barns in the area. Even though the son’s belief that the object is a barn is caused by a real barn, he doesn’t know that it is.
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7.3-8 The Reliability Theory Knowledge is reliably produced true belief. Diagnosis of the Gettier problem: the beliefs were not produced by reliable means.
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7.3-9 Thought Experiment: Lehrer’s Human Thermometer Suppose Mr. Truetemp has a thermometer implanted in his skull that causes him to have reliable beliefs about the temperature. Suppose further that Mr. Truetemp never checks his temperature beliefs. Even though his beliefs are reliably produced, they don’t constitute knowledge.
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7.3-10 Virtue Perspectivism An intellectual virtue is a skill or ability that reliably produces true beliefs, like perception, memory, and reason. Virtue perspectivism claims that knowledge is apt belief—belief that is taken to be true because of one’s intellectual virtue.
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7.3-11 Evaluating Performances A performance is accurate if it achieves its goal. A performance is adroit if it manifests the skill of the performer. A performance is apt if it’s accurate because it’s adroit.
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7.3-12 Knowledge as a Performance The goal of knowledge is true belief. So: A belief is accurate if it’s true. A belief is adroit if it manifests the intellectual virtue of the believer. A belief is apt if it’s believed to be true because of that virtue. Only apt belief is worthy of being considered knowledge.
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7.3-13 Animal Knowledge vs. Reflective Knowledge Animal knowledge is apt belief. Reflective knowledge is belief that we know to be apt.
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7.3-14 Virtue Perspectivism Solutions to Gettier-type Problems Gettier’s Guy in Barcelona has neither animal nor reflective knowledge because his belief is not apt. The subjects in Goldman’s fake barns and Lehrer’s Human Thermometer have animal knowledge but not reflective knowledge. The subject in the Demented Mrs. Grabit may have both animal and reflective knowledge.
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