Entries Tagged with "Relativism"


Activism and Spirituality

Published on Sunday, March 12th, 2006

Activism is intentional action to bring about social or political change. This action is in support of, or opposition to, one side of a controversial argument. We all know those who gather in groups to create a spiritual change on the planet, help the poor, feed the hungry, keep the ozone layer from disappearing, etc, etc. There are many good people doing great works. There is a difference however, between service to others and fighting for a cause.

There are probably more activist groups fighting for change on the planet than anyone could ever conceive of. The intentions behind their actions are of the highest, but there are qualities about activism I’ve always questioned.* Does it work and is it fruitful? Does it matter in the long or short term? Would the planet have had the potential for change regardless of how hard anyone was forcing (yang), or should it change in its’ own time (yin)?

“Are we supposed to interfere?” Karma, being the great equalizer doesn’t ask us to get involved. Does God want us to “do something (or anything at all for that matter)?” The last and biggest question of all is, “Are we heaping more karma on ourselves or others? If we pick someone up who’s down and he or she keeps falling, are we preventing them from hitting bottom? We would certainly be extending their own journey and creating lengthier karmic consequences for them, as well as ourselves. This would apply to everything we interfere with.

How are we to know what’s the highest good for another? Perhaps their karmic highest good is exactly what is happening to them. Is there something, which we need to do? By keeping ones’ own consciousness level high, planetary consciousness is lifted, collectively. What we do is within the context of what we are, consciously. If our level of consciousness is above 500 and the level of love, or even higher (joy), then we would probably seek to alleviate suffering. At even higher levels, nothing needs doing. “The spiritual ego wants to save the world. What are you going to save it from? If you want to do something for the world, teach people to overcome ignorance.”__Dr. David Hawkins

Teaching is one of the highest forms of service. There are people all over the planet bringing wisdom to the world in the form of willingness to see education flourish. Seeing educational opportunities given to all is a very high calling. It is not necessarily the path to “enlightenment”, but it is a form of “right livelihood.” Teaching the path to enlightenment however, is the path to God. Enlightened education when incorporated into mainstream education has the ability to create an enlightened planet. Education alone, without higher consciousness doesn’t have the power to end wars, poverty, and unhappiness. What it could be creating are highly educated criminals, if spirit isn’t taken into consideration. There cannot be education without educating the totality of the Self.

A quality of activism is righteousness for others good. The injection of pride into this adds yet another layer of ego to unravel. Even with good intentions, this can be dangerous. Socrates said, “Man chooses only what he believes to be the good.” Man however, doesn’t have the capacity to know what’s good for himself let alone another’s Truth.** That’s a fact throughout history. Human beings have been warring more than they have ever been at peace. Warmongers will always want war, and those who have to defend themselves do so out of the necessity to serve. Minds cannot be changed through activism and force, so do we pluck the narcissistic megalomaniacs out of leadership at the start? Does policing the world have any positive effects? There is no proof it has worked in a permanent way, as evil continues to spawn as time goes on.

Superman of the 1950’s fought for truth, justice and the American way. That however was American truth, American justice and the American way wasn’t the way of the rest of the world. Fighting in any respect is force, not power, therefore pushing ones will where it was not asked for is a dangerous game. In a fight there is always a winner and a loser and the loser gets beat up. Win-lose is not a positive outcome. Choosing what we think is right for another is a dangerous, egoistic practice. That is true, historically. (Read about the history of the world wars to see what relativism has created.)

Is our activism as altruistic as we think? The enlightened master Ramana Maharshi said, “There’s no use in trying to save the world, for the world you see doesn’t even exist.” This is enlightened wisdom. What then are we supposed to do when called upon? Be kind to others? Yes. Hurt no living thing? Yes. Give a helping hand? Yes, but only for the highest good with compassion, but not endless enabling. Be charitable? Of course. Avoiding negativity and lower levels of consciousness is wise. In their own ways Jesus, Krishna and all enlightened masters have said this.

Practice loving kindness, while being non-interfering. Be that which is inspiring, not for a cause and effect, but because that is what you are. If one is inspired to do something, then the inspiration to give a part of yourself becomes its’ own highest meaning. Love produces a field which will lift others. Praying to God for guidance and the highest good for all is wiser than forcing that which will take its’ own course in Gods’ Infinite Time.

In order to reach the goal of enlightenment, all opinions, beliefs, and positionalities must be surrendered. Allow the Infinite Field of Consciousness to give you answers. Revere all of life for the miracle it is. As my teacher, Dr. Hawkins says, “Live life as a prayer.” ©Myswizard all rights reserved ‘05-’09

*Although I offer these questions within a linear, Newtonian paradigm, activism itself has no substance within the levels above 500 (calibration levels of The Map of Consciousness), which operates out of love and service. The answers to the questions are already known in the Infinite Field. Activism is a result of egoistic ideologies and righteousness. In actuality activism produces frustration, argumentation, conflict and questionable results.
**Truth as Divinity which is Absolute Truth.


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Meme and Creation

Published on Saturday, December 17th, 2005

Meme n. pron.(meem)
A unit of cultural information, such as a cultural practice or idea, that is transmitted verbally or by repeated action from one mind to another.
Etymology:
Shortening (modeled on gene ), of mimeme from Greek mimma, something imitated, from mimeisthai, to imitate ; see mimesis

Being the kind of person who likes to take the difficult and make it simple (Occam’s Razor or KISS), I’m going to share explanations, about thought, attention, and intention.

Thoughts and ideas arise out of a nonlinear energy field, which is a part of the totality of “The Field” (The Electromagnetic Field of everything…Universal Intelligence or God.) Thought, once given energy (through our intention or will) moves to the linear or local (our mind.) At this point it is real (a creation within our linear reality).

This is where a meme comes into play. This creation is either based on Absolute Truth or non-truth (due to the bias of indoctrination, opinions and most cultural ideas.) If an idea or piece of information becomes our reality, we now have the beginnings of either Relativistic Epistemology,*or our own personal design for life. The ensuing consequences are astonishing, pleasing, or horrifying (depending on what is created). As consciousness is raised, creation come from The Field of Absolute Truth and our memes dissolve.

That is how and what we create, using our intentions. It is all part of the miracle of creation. This is God creating, with all of us as an extension of The creation.

*See articles on Relativism, Epistemology, and Relativistic Epistemology
Thank you to Dr. Hawkins for his class discourses on Relativistic Epistemology and Creation
©Myswizard all rights reserved ‘05


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Relativism

Published on Friday, December 16th, 2005

Relativism

Philosophy Portal
Relativism is the view that the meaning and value of human beliefs and behaviors have no absolute reference. Relativists claim that humans understand and evaluate beliefs and behaviors only in terms of, for example, their historical and cultural context.

Philosophers identify many different kinds of relativism depending upon what allegedly depends on something and what something depends on. The term is often used for truth relativism - the doctrine that there is no absolute truth (i.e. whether a belief is true or not depends on the believer). Few modern philosophers support truth relativism.

George Lakoff and Mark Johnson define relativism in their book Metaphors We Live By as the rejection of both subjectivism and objectivism in order to focus on the relationship between them, i.e. the metaphor by which we relate our current experience to our previous experience. In particular, they characterize “objectivism” as a “straw man”, and, to a lesser degree, criticize the views of Karl Popper, Kant and Aristotle.

Advocates of relativism
The concept of relativism has importance both for philosophers and for anthropologists, although in different ways. Philosophers explore how beliefs might or might not in fact depend for their truth upon such items as language, conceptual scheme, culture, and so forth; with ethical relativism furnishing just one example. Anthropologists, on the other hand, occupy themselves with describing actual human behavior. For them, relativism refers to a methodological stance, in which the researcher suspends (or brackets) his or her own cultural biases while attempting to understand beliefs and behaviors in their local contexts. This has become known as methodological relativism, and is specifically concerned with avoiding ethnocentrism, or applying one’s cultural standards to the assessment of other cultures.

The combination of both approaches results in what is known as descriptive relativism, which claims that different cultures have different views of morality, which cannot be unified under one general conception of morality. Thus, one might want to claim that all cultures, for example, prohibit the killing of innocents. The descriptive relativist reply to this is that while this might be true at a general level, different cultures have different understandings of what “innocent” means, and so are still culturally relative.

Elements of relativism emerged at least as early as the Sophists.

One argument for relativism is that our own cognitive bias prevents us from observing something objectively with our own senses, and notational bias will apply to whatever allegedly can be measured without using our senses. In addition, we have a culture bias shared with other trusted observers, which cannot be eliminated. A counterargument to this is that subjective certainty and concrete objects and causes are part of our everyday life, and that there is no great value in discarding such useful ideas as isomorphism, objectivity and a final truth.

Another important advocate of relativism, Bernard Crick, a British political scientist, wrote the book In Defence of Politics (first published in 1962), suggesting the inevitability of moral conflict between people. Crick stated that only ethics could resolve such conflict, and when that occurred in public it resulted in politics. Accordingly, Crick saw the process of dispute resolution, harms reduction, mediation or peacemaking as central to all of moral philosophy. He became an important influence on the feminists and later on the Greens.

Arguments against relativism
A common argument against relativism suggests that it is inherently contradictory or self-refuting or self-stultifying: the statement “all is relative” is either a relative statement or an absolute one. If it is relative, then this statement does not rule out absolutes. If the statement is absolute, on the other hand, then it provides an example of an absolute statement, proving that not all truths are relative.

Counter-argumentsHowever such a contradiction is irrelivant as it constitutes arguing from the premise. Once you have said if the X is absolute you have presupposed relativism is false. And one cannot prove a statement using that statement as a premise. There is a contradiction, but the contradiction is between relativism and the presuppositions of absoluteness in the ordinary logic used. Nothing has been proven wrong and nothing has been proven in and of itself, only the known incompatibility has been restated inefficiently.

Another counter-argument uses Bertrand Russell’s Paradox, which refers to the “List of all lists that do not contain themselves”. This paradox has been famously debated by Kurt Gödel, Jorge Luis Borges, and Jean Baudrillard.

A very different approach is to explicate the rhetorical production of supposedly ‘bottom line’ arguments against relativism. Edwards et al’s influential and controversial Death and Furniture paper takes this line in its staunch defence of relativism.

The Catholic Church and relativism
The Catholic Church for some time now, especially with Cardinal Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) as head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, has identified relativism as one of the problems of today.

According to the Church and some philosophers, relativism, as a denial of absolute truth, leads to moral license and a denial of the possibility of sin and of God.

Relativism, they say, is a denial of the capacity of our mind and reason to arrive at truth. Truth, according to Catholic theologians and philosophers, following Aristotle and Plato, is adequatio rei et intellectus, the correspondence of the mind and reality. Another way of putting it is: the mind having the same form as reality. This means when the form of the computer in front of me (the type, color, shape, capacity, etc.) is also the form that is in my mind, then what I know is true because my mind corresponds to objective reality.

Relativism, according to the Catholic and Aristotelian viewpoint, violates the philosophical principle of non-contradiction, a most fundamental principle of all thinking without which there is no way to understand each other nor any possibility of science.

The denial of an absolute reference is a denial of God, who is Absolute Truth, according to these Christian philosophers. Thus, they say, relativism is linked to secularism, an obstruction of God in human life.

John Paul II
John Paul II in Veritatis Splendor (the Beauty of the Truth) stressed the dependence of man on God and his law (”Without the Creator, the creature disappears”) and the “dependence of freedom on the truth”. He warned that man “giving himself over to relativism and skepticism, goes off in search of an illusory freedom apart from truth itself”.

In the Gospel of Life, he says:

The original and inalienable right to life is questioned or denied on the basis of a parliamentary vote or the will of one part of the people-even if it is the majority. This is the sinister result of a relativism which reigns unopposed: the “right” ceases to be such, because it is no longer firmly founded on the inviolable dignity of the person, but is made subject to the will of the stronger part. In this way democracy, contradicting its own principles, effectively moves towards a form of totalitarianism. The State is no longer the “common home” where all can live together on the basis of principles of fundamental equality, but is transformed into a tyrant State, which arrogates to itself the right to dispose of the life of the weakest and most defenceless members, from the unborn child to the elderly, in the name of a public interest which is really nothing but the interest of one part. (Italics added)

Benedict XVI
Benedict XVI in his address to the cardinals during the pre-conclave Mass which would elect him as Pope, a key public address to the top leaders of the Church, talked about the world “moving towards a dictatorship of relativism.” (Italics added)

On June 6, 2005, he told educators:

“Today, a particularly insidious obstacle to the task of education is the massive presence in our society and culture of that relativism which, recognizing nothing as definitive, leaves as the ultimate criterion only the self with its desires. And under the semblance of freedom it becomes a prison for each one, for it separates people from one another, locking each person into his or her own ‘ego’”
Then during the World Youth Day, he also traced to relativism the problems produced by the communist and sexual revolutions, and provides a counter-counter argument.

In the last century we experienced revolutions with a common programme – expecting nothing more from God, they assumed total responsibility for the cause of the world in order to change it. And this, as we saw, meant that a human and partial point of view was always taken as an absolute guiding principle. Absolutizing what is not absolute but relative is called totalitarianism. It does not liberate man, but takes away his dignity and enslaves him. It is not ideologies that save the world, but only a return to the living God, our Creator, the guarantor of our freedom, the guarantor of what is really good and true.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article “Relativism”.


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Epistemology

Published on Friday, December 16th, 2005

Epistemology, from the Greek words episteme (knowledge) and logos (word/speech) is the branch of philosophy that deals with the nature, origin and scope of knowledge. Historically, it has been one of the most investigated and most debated of all philosophical subjects. Much of this debate has focused on analysing the nature and variety of knowledge and how it relates to similar notions such as truth and belief. Much of this discussion concerns the justification of knowledge claims.

Not surprisingly, the way that knowledge claims are justified both leads to and depends on the general approach to philosophy one adopts. Thus, philosophers have developed a range of epistemological theories to accompany their general philosophical positions. More recent studies have re-written centuries-old assumptions, and the field of epistemology continues to be vibrant and dynamic.

Definition of knowledge

Justified true belief
In Plato’s dialogue the Theaetetus, Socrates considers a number of definitions of knowledge. One of the prominent candidates is justified true belief. We know that, for something to count as knowledge, it must be true, and be believed to be true. Socrates argues that this is insufficient; in addition one must have a reason or justification for that belief.

One implication of this definition is that one cannot be said to “know” something just because one believes it and that belief subsequently turns out to be true. An ill person with no medical training but a generally optimistic attitude might believe that she will recover from her illness quickly, but even if this belief turned out to be true, on the Theaetetus account the patient did not know that she would get well, because her belief lacked justification.

Knowledge, therefore, is distinguished from true belief by its justification, and much of epistemology is concerned with how true beliefs might be properly justified. This is sometimes referred to as the theory of justification.

The Theaetetus definition agrees with the common sense notion that we can believe things without knowing them. Whilst knowing p entails that p is true, believing in p does not, since we can have false beliefs. It also implies that we believe everything that we know. That is, the things we know form a subset of the things we believe.

The problem of defining knowledge
For most of philosophical history, “knowledge” was taken to mean belief that was justified as true to an absolute certainty. Any less justified beliefs were called mere “probable opinion.” This viewpoint still prevailed at least as late as Bertrand Russell’s early 20th century book The Problems of Philosophy. In the decades that followed, however, the notion that the belief had to be justified to a certainty lost favour.

In the 1960s, Edmund Gettier criticised the Theaetetus definition of knowledge by pointing out situations in which a believer has a true belief justified to a reasonable degree; and yet in the situations he describes, everyone would agree that the believer does not have knowledge.

A priori versus a posteriori knowledge
Western philosophers for centuries have distinguished between two kinds of knowledge: a priori and a posteriori knowledge.

A priori knowledge is knowledge gained or justified by reason alone, without the direct or indirect influence of any particular experience (here, experience usually means observation of the world through sense perception. See Rationalism, below, for clarification.)

A posteriori knowledge is any other sort of knowledge; that is, knowledge the attainment or justification of which requires reference to experience. This is also called empirical knowledge.

One of the fundamental questions in epistemology is whether there is any non-trivial a priori knowledge. Generally speaking rationalists believe that there is, while empiricists believe that all knowledge is ultimately derived from some kind of external experience.

The fields of knowledge most often suggested as having a priori status are logic and mathematics, which deal primarily with abstract, formal objects.

Empiricists have traditionally denied that even these fields could be a priori knowledge. Two common arguments are that these sorts of knowledge can only be derived from experience (as John Stuart Mill argued), and that they do not constitute “real” knowledge (as David Hume argued).

Knowledge and belief
Knowledge is true and believed and …There are two slightly different meanings of belief that must be distinguished. In the first sense John might “believe in” his cousin Joe. This may mean that he is willing to loan Joe money, trusting in his paying it back. In this sense, John might say, “I know it is safer to fly than drive, yet I don’t believe it” in which case John doesn’t trust in the pilots of commercial aircraft, even though as a cognitive matter he may understand the pertinent statistics.

In the second sense of belief, to believe something just means to think that it is true. That is, to believe P is to do no more than to think, for whatever reason, that P is the case. It is this sort of belief that philosophers most often mean when they are discussing knowledge. The reason is that in order to know something, one must think that it is true - one must believe (in the second sense) it to be the case.

Consider someone saying “I know that P, but I don’t think P is true”. The person making this utterance has, in a profound sense, contradicted themselves. If one knows that P, then, amongst other things, one thinks that P is indeed true. If one thinks that P is true, then one believes P. (See: Moore’s paradox.)

Knowledge is distinct from belief and opinion. If someone claims to believe something, they are claiming that they think that it is the truth. But of course, it might turn out that they were mistaken, and that what they thought was true was actually false. This is not the case with knowledge. For example, suppose that Jeff thinks that a particular bridge is safe, and attempts to cross it; unfortunately the bridge collapses under his weight. We might say that Jeff believed that the bridge was safe, but that his belief was mistaken. We would not say that he knew that the bridge was safe, because plainly it was not. For something to count as knowledge, it must be true.

Similarly, two people can believe things that are mutually contradictory, but they cannot know (unequivocally) things that are mutually contradictory. For example, Jeff can believe the bridge safe, while Jenny believes it unsafe. But Jeff cannot know the bridge is safe and Jenny cannot know that the bridge is unsafe simultaneously. Two people cannot know contradictory things.

Distinguishing knowing that from knowing how
Suppose that Fred says to you: “The fastest swimming stroke is the front crawl. One performs the front crawl by oscillating the legs at the hip, and moving the arms in an approximately circular motion”. Here, Fred has propositional knowledge of swimming and how to perform the front crawl.

However, if Fred acquired this propositional knowledge from an encyclopedia, he will not have acquired the skill of swimming: he has some propositional knowledge, but does not have any procedural knowledge or “know-how”. In general, one can demonstrate know-how by performing the task in question, but it is harder to demonstrate propositional knowledge. Michael Polanyi popularised the term tacit knowledge to distinguish the ability to do something from the ability to describe how to do something. Gilbert Ryle had previously made a similar point in discussing the characteristics of intelligence. His ideas are summed up in the aphorism “efficient practice precedes the theory of it”. Someone with the ability to perform the appropriate moves is said to be able to swim, even if that person cannot precisely identify what it is they do in order to swim. This distinction is often traced back to Plato, who used the term techne or skill for knowledge how, and the term episteme for a more robust kind of knowledge in which claims can be true or false.

Justification
Much of epistemology has been concerned with seeking ways to justify knowledge statements.

Irrationalism
Some approaches to justifying knowledge are not rational — that is, they reject the notion that justification must obey logic or reason. Nihilism started out as a materialistic political philosophy, but is sometimes redefined as the apparently absurd doctrine that there can be no justification for knowledge claims — absurd because it appears to be self-contradictory to claim that one knows that knowledge is impossible, but perhaps for a nihilist, self-contradiction is simply unimportant.

Mysticism
Mysticism is the use of non-rational methods to arrive at beliefs and accepting such beliefs as knowledge. For example, believing that something is true based on emotion would be regarded as epistemological mysticism, whereas believing based on deductive logic or scientific experiment would not. An instance of this may be when one bases one’s belief in the existence of something merely on one’s desire that it should exist. Another example might be the use of a daisy’s petals and the phrase “he loves me/ he loves me not” while they are plucked to determine whether Romeo returns Juliet’s affections. The mysticism in this example would be the assumption that such a method has predictive or indicative powers without rational evidence of such. In both of these examples, belief is not justified through a rational means. Mysticism need not be an intentional process: one may engage in mysticism without being aware of it.

Rationality
If one does not reject rationality, but still wishes to maintain that knowledge claims cannot be or are not justified, one might be termed a skeptic. Here we are on firmer philosophical ground; since skeptics accept the validity of reason, they can present logical arguments for their case.

For instance, the regress argument has it that one can ask for the justification for any statement of knowledge. If that justification takes the form of another statement, one can again reasonably ask for that statement also to be justified, and so forth. This appears to lead to an infinite regress, with every statement justified by some other statement. It would be impossible to check that each justification is satisfactory, and so relying on such a series quickly leads to skepticism.

Alternately, one might claim that some knowledge statements do not require justification. Much of the history of epistemology is the story of conflicting philosophical doctrines claiming that this or that type of knowledge statement has special status. This view is known as Foundationalism.

One can also avoid the regress if one supposes that the assumption that a knowledge statement can only be supported by another knowledge statement is simply misguided. Coherentism holds that a knowledge statement is not justified by some small subset of other knowledge statements, but by the entire set. That is, a statement is justified if it coheres with all other knowledge claims in the system. This has the advantage of avoiding the infinite regress without claiming special status for some particular sorts of statements. But since a system might still be consistent and yet simply wrong, it raises the difficulty of ensuring that the whole system corresponds in some way with the truth.

Synthetic and analytic statements
Some statements are such that they appear not to need any justification once one understands their meaning. For example, consider: my father’s brother is my uncle. This statement is true in virtue of the meaning of the terms it contains, and so it seems frivolous to ask for a justification for saying it is true. Philosophers call such statements analytic. More technically, a statement is analytic if the concept in the predicate is included in the concept in the subject. In the example, the concept of uncle (the predicate) is included in the concept of being my father’s brother (the subject). Not all analytic statements are as trivial as this example. Mathematical statements are often taken to be analytic.

Synthetic statements, on the other hand, have distinct subjects and predicates. An example would be my father’s brother is overweight.

Although anticipated by David Hume, this distinction was more clearly formulated by Immanuel Kant, and later given a more formal shape by Frege. Wittgenstein noted in the Tractatus that analytic statements “express no thoughts”, that is, that they tell us nothing new; although analytic statements do not require justification, they are singularly uninformative. W.V.O. Quine, in his famous Two Dogmas of Empiricism, challenged the legitimacy of the analytic-synthetic distinction altogether.

Epistemological theories
It is common for epistemological theories to avoid skepticism by adopting a foundationalist approach. To do this, they argue that certain types of statements have a special epistemological status — that of not needing to be justified. So it is possible to classify epistemological theories according to the type of statement that each argues has this special status.

Empiricism
Empiricists claim knowledge is a product of human experience. Statements of observations take pride of place in empiricist theory. Naïve empiricism holds simply that our ideas and theories need to be tested against reality, and accepted or rejected on the basis of how well they correspond to observed facts. The central problem for epistemology then becomes explaining this correspondence.

Empiricism is associated with science. While there can be little doubt about the effectiveness of science, there is much philosophical debate about how and why science works. The Scientific Method was once favoured as the reason for scientific success, but recently difficulties in the philosophy of science have led to a rise in coherentism.

Empiricism is sometimes associated with a tradition called logical empiricism, or positivism, which places higher emphasis on ideas about reality rather than on experiences of reality.

Idealism
Idealism holds that what we refer to and perceive as the external world is in some way an artifice of the mind. Analytic statements (for example, mathematical truths), are held to be true without reference to the external world, and these are taken to be exemplary knowledge statements. George Berkeley, Immanuel Kant and Georg Hegel held various idealist views. Idealism is itself a metaphysical thesis, but has important epistemological consequences.

Naïve realism
Naïve realism, or Common-Sense realism is the belief that there is a real external world, and that our perceptions are caused directly by that world. It has its foundation in causation in that an object being there causes us to see it. Thus, it follows, the world remains as it is when it is perceived - when it is not being perceived - a room is still there once we exit. The opposite theory to this is solipsism. Naïve realism fails to take into account the psychology of perception. (See: G.E. Moore.)

Phenomenalism
Phenomenalism is a development from George Berkeley’s claim that to be is to be perceived. According to phenomenalism, when you see a tree, you see a certain perception of a brown shape, when you touch it, you get a perception of pressure against your palm. On this view, one shouldn’t think of objects as distinct substances, which interact with our senses so that we may perceive them; rather we should conclude that all that really exists is the perception itself.

Pragmatism
Pragmatism about knowledge holds that what is important about knowledge is that it solves certain problems that are constrained both by the world and by human purposes. The place of knowledge in human activity is to resolve the problems that arise in conflicts between belief and action. Pragmatists are also typically committed to the use of the experimental method in all forms of inquiry, a non-skeptical fallibilism about our current store of knowledge, and the importance of knowledge proving itself through future testing.

Rationalism
Rationalists believe that there are a priori or innate ideas that are not derived from sense experience. These ideas, however, may be justified by experience. These ideas may in some way derive from the structure of the human mind, or they may exist independently of the mind. If they exist independently, they may be understood by a human mind once it reaches a necessary degree of sophistication.

The epitome of the rationalist view is Descartes’ Cogito ergo sum (”I think, therefore I am”), in which the skeptic is invited to consider that the mere fact that he doubts this claim implies that there is a doubter. Because doubting is a kind of thinking, the claim must be correct. Spinoza derived a rationalist system in which there is only one substance, God. Leibniz derived a system in which there are an infinite number of substances, his Monads.

Representationalism
Representationalism or representative realism, unlike naïve realism, proposes that we cannot see the external world directly, but only through our perceptual representations of it. In other words, the objects and the world that you see around you are not the world itself, but merely an internal virtual-reality replica of that world. The so-called veil of perception removes the real world from our direct inspection.

Relativism
Relativism as advocated by Protagoras maintains that all things are true and in a constant state of flux, revealing certain aspects of truth at one time while concealing them at another. It claims that there is no objective truth: anything which a person can perceive is true for that person, but not necessarily true for the next person. By equating perceptions and beliefs with truth, overt self-contradiction is avoided.

Skepticism
When scientists or philosophers ask “Is knowledge possible?”, they mean to say “Am I ever sufficiently justified in believing something in order to have knowledge?” Adherents of philosophical skepticism often say “no”. Philosophical skepticism is the position which critically examines whether the knowledge and perceptions people have is true; adherents of this position hold that one can never obtain true knowledge, since justification is never certain. This is a different position from scientific skepticism, which is the practical stance that one should not accept the veracity of claims until solid evidence is produced.

Contemporary approaches
Much contemporary work in epistemology depends on the two categories: foundationalism and coherentism.

Recently, Susan Haack has attempted to fuse these two approaches into her doctrine of Foundherentism, which accrues degrees of relative confidence to beliefs by mediating between the two approaches. She covers this in her book Evidence and Inquiry: Towards Reconstruction in Epistemology.

Gettier
Main articles: Edmund Gettier, Gettier problem
Edmund Gettier argued that there are situations in which a belief may be justified and true, and yet would not count as knowledge. Although being a justified, true belief is necessary for a statement to count as knowledge, it is not sufficient. At the least, the set of our justified true beliefs contains things that we would not say that we know.

Some epistemologists have attempted to find strengthened criteria for knowledge that are not subject to the sorts of counterexamples Gettier and his many successors have produced. Most of these attempts involve adding a fourth condition or placing restrictions on the kind or degree of justification suitable to produce knowledge. None of these projects has yet gained widespread acceptance. Kirkham has argued that this is because the only definition that could ever be immune to all such counterexamples is the original one that prevailed from ancient times through Russell: to qualify as an item of knowledge, a belief must not only be true and justified, the evidence for the belief must necessitate its truth. Though this seems to imply a sweeping skepticism, Kirkham notes that it doesn’t exclude the possibility of rational belief altogether.

Gettier’s article was published in 1963. Right after that, for a good decade or more, there was an enormous number of articles trying to supply the missing fourth condition of knowledge. The big project was to try to figure out the “X” in the equation, Knowledge = belief + truth + justification + X. Whenever someone proposed an answer, someone else would come up with a new counterexample to shoot down that definition.

Some of the proposed solutions involve factors external to the agent. These responses are therefore called externalism. For example, one externalist response to the Gettier problem is to say that the justified, true belief must be caused (in the right sort of way) by the relevant facts.

In the aftermath of the publication of the Gettier problem and other similar scenarios, a number of new definitions were formulated. While there is general consensus that truth and belief are two necessary facets of knowledge, there is a debate about what needs to be added to the true beliefs to make them knowledge, and a debate about whether justification is necessary in the definition at all.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article “Epistemology”.


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