1 / 6

Respectful Disagreement

Respectful Disagreement What should we do when we find out that someone we consider just as or even more intelligent and informed as we are on a certain topic disagrees with us on that topic?. Points of Disagreement: Horse A won the race. God exists.

Download Presentation

Respectful Disagreement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Respectful Disagreement What should we do when we find out that someone we consider just as or even more intelligent and informed as we are on a certain topic disagrees with us on that topic?

  2. Points of Disagreement: • Horse A won the race. • God exists. • Katy Perry’s music is better than Lady Gaga’s music. • Capital punishment is morally acceptable. • Capital punishment is a significant deterrent of crime. • Hitler was a moral monster. • Babe Ruth was a better baseball player than Ty Cobb. • Jane Austen wrote “Pride and Prejudice” after she wrote “Emma”. • There is no life after death. • If JFK hadn’t been assassinated, he would have run for president again. • Michael Jordan is tall. • Kobe Bryant is famous. • He should add more sugar to the recipe.

  3. Some Results So Far: • Some beliefs are true, others are false. • Thus, Belief  Truth • A person can believe X without having justification for that belief. • Thus, Belief  Justified Belief. • A person can have a justified belief that isn’t true. • Thus, TrueBelief  Justified Belief. • A person can believe X without knowing X. • Thus, Belief  Knowledge • A person can have a true belief that doesn’t amount to knowledge • Thus, True Belief  Knowledge. • A person can have a justified belief that doesn’t amount to knowledge. • Thus, Justified Belief  Knowledge.

  4. Therefore, we should keep these five key concepts distinct: • Belief • Truth • Justified Belief • True Belief • Knowledge • These are five separate things; don’t confuse them!

  5. Lesson: Beliefs False Beliefs True Beliefs Justified True Belief Justified False Belief K Knowledge must be found in the JTB area. Question: is K = JTB? Or is K  JTB?

  6. JTB Analysis of Propositional Knowledge: • Someone knows P just in case • She believes P • P is true, and • She bases her belief on strong overallevidence or reason for P; her belief in P is overalljustifiedorwarranted • Main problems studied in epistemology lie in the last bullet point: • How good do your reasons/evidence have to be to make your belief count as knowledge? • What kinds of evidence are there? • What’s the relation between evidence/reason and justification (e.g., does justification always require evidence/reason)? • What is this “basing” relation?

More Related