Friday, August 2, 2019
Philosophy Unit Essay
A thought or notion that cannot be true or false | God, Dog, Evil | Proposition | A statement which is either right/wrong | ââ¬Å"God is pinkâ⬠| Knowledge | Expressed in propositions that are formed by joining concepts, state something that is true or false | ââ¬Å"The dog is Yellowâ⬠| Three Types of Knowledge | ââ¬â Propositional- ââ¬Å"Know thatâ⬠ââ¬â Knowledge by Acquaintance ââ¬â ââ¬Å"Know ofâ⬠ââ¬â capacity/Ability ââ¬â ââ¬Å"Know howâ⬠| | A Priori | Propositional knowledge that we know is right before (sense) experience | ââ¬Å"2+2=4 ââ¬Å" | A Posteriori | Propositional knowledge that we know is right only after (sense) experience | ââ¬Å"The sky is blueâ⬠| Synthetic | Not true by definition ââ¬â Tells us something substantial about the world | ââ¬Å"Snow is whiteâ⬠| Analytic | True by definition | ââ¬Å"All Bachelors are unmarried menâ⬠| Necessary | Had to be true, true in all possible worlds | Maths ââ¬â 2+2=4 | Contingent | Could be otherwise | ââ¬Å"Obama was elected Presidentâ⬠| Induction | Reasoning that draws conclusions from a finite collection of specific observations. | 1). The sun has always risen 2). The sun will always rise | Deduction | Reasoning in which the conclusion must follow the premises | 1). Man is mortal 2). Socrates is man 3). Socrates is mortal | Innate | Knowledge that is present in the mind at birth | Conceptual Schemes ââ¬â Kant | Intuitive | propositions that we know are right through pure thought | ââ¬Å"I think therefore I existâ⬠ââ¬â Descartes | Empiricism | Argues that you can only have analytic a priori knowledge | ââ¬Å"All Widows were once Marriedâ⬠(Analytic a priori) | Rationalism | Argues that you can have analytic and synthetic a priori knowledge (Not Plato) | ââ¬Å"God Existsâ⬠ââ¬â Descartes (Synthetic a priori) | All Ideas Come From Experience: Empiricism John Locke | David Hume | The mind is a Tabula Rasa ââ¬â Blank Slate Sensation + Reflection Simple, complex, and abstract ideas Simple ideas come from sensation Complex + Abstract come from reflection | Sensation creates impressions in our minds Ideas are ââ¬Ëfaint impressionsââ¬â¢ of sensations which are ââ¬Ëvivid and forcefulââ¬â¢ All thoughts are combinations of ideas e. g. Golden Mountain | Counter Arguments: Not all simple ideas come from experience Missing shade of blue ââ¬â Hume | Complex/Abstract ideas are not from experience general idea is required to form the abstract idea ââ¬â Curruthers | Some ideas are innate Ideas of God/Infinity ââ¬â Descartes Veined Marble ââ¬â Leibniz All knowledge is innate in the soul, just needs to be recalled ââ¬â Plato | Knowledge about what exists must be justified by sense experience: John Lock | 2 Fountains of Knowledge ââ¬â Sensation + Reflection All ideas are from these ââ¬â So all propositions must be as well | BUT | David Hume | Humeââ¬â¢s Fork Relations of Ideas ââ¬â Analytic a priori knowledge Matters of Fact ââ¬â Synthetic a posteriori knowledge Anything is ââ¬ËEmpty Metaphysical Speculationâ⬠and should be ââ¬Ëcast to the flamesââ¬â¢ e. g. God | Humeââ¬â¢s Fork itself is ââ¬â¢empty metaphysical speculationââ¬â¢ ââ¬â contradicts itself | Alfred Jules Ayer | Verification Principle Analytic or Empirically Verifiable (can be proven by experience) Anything else is meaningless e. g. Infinity | | John Stewart Mill | No a priori knowledge All knowledge is a posteriori and learnt through induction, including logic and mathematics | What about analytic a priori knowledge? ââ¬Å"A bachelor is not marriedâ⬠| Strengths: Sets clear limits on appropriate objects of knowledge ââ¬â Allows us to learn without being distracted by ââ¬ËEmpty Metaphysical Speculationââ¬â¢ The view reflects our experience of learning ââ¬â It explains why we learn like we do Counter Arguments: Sense experience is never certain ââ¬â Leads to scepticism Senses, Dreams, Deceiving Demon ââ¬â Descartes Cave Analogy ââ¬â Plato | Some knowledge about what exists is known a priori Self/God/EW ââ¬â Descartes Forms ââ¬â Plato Causation, self, space ââ¬â Kant | Knowledge of relations of ideas is a priori Donââ¬â¢t get more certain ââ¬â True in all possible worlds ââ¬â Russell | Experience alone is unintelligible Needs to be mediated through a conceptual scheme ââ¬â Kant, Saphir/Whorf | Mind contains innate knowledge: Plato | All knowledge is innate Slave Boy Analogy No education but still recognises the proof Learning as recollecting/remembering prompted by questioning Reason recognises truth not the senses | BUT Boy is prompted through questions | Leibniz | Veined Marble Mind not passive ââ¬â contains ââ¬Ënatural inclinations and dispositions, habits or potentialitiesââ¬â¢ | | Kant | Conceptual Schemes are innate Categories are innate e. g. Space, Time, Self | The conceptual scheme is innate capacity/ability knowledge, not propositional knowledge | Counter arguments: This knowledge can be explained through intuition and deduction Reason discovers the knowledge ââ¬â Descartes | Innate knowledge is absurd ââ¬â There is no universal assent Children and idiots donââ¬â¢t know the simplest truths ââ¬â Locke | Innate knowledge is a ââ¬Ënear contradictionââ¬â¢ ââ¬â Impossible to know but not know that you know ââ¬â Locke | Doctrine of Innate Ideas: Descartes | Ideas are either: Adventitious ââ¬â From experience Factitious ââ¬â Made up by us Innate ââ¬â In the mind at birth | ââ¬ËGodââ¬â¢, ââ¬ËInfinityââ¬â¢, and ââ¬Ësupreme perfectionââ¬â¢ are not experienced or made up They must therefore be innate (Trademark Argument ââ¬â We know of God, but do not experience God ââ¬â He left his mark on us ââ¬â This is innate) | Innate ideas provide the materials for reason to think develop knowledge without needing experience | Counter Arguments: John Locke | The mind as a Tubula Rasa (slank slate) at birth There is no innate knowledge only a posteriori knowledge We have of positive idea of infinity Infinity is defined in the negative ââ¬Ënever endingââ¬â¢, only ever experience being able to add more on | David Hume | All ideas are formed from experience E. g. Golden Mountain ââ¬â God is just qualities in man joined together and ââ¬Ëaugmented without limitââ¬â¢ | Knowledge Through Intuition + Deduction Key Terms | Intuition | Self evident truths ââ¬â Reached through pure thought | Deduction | Conclusion reached by following same premises e. g. Sudoku ââ¬â Original numbers are self evident, other numbers discovered through reason. Answer is certain | Descartes | Intuition | Self as a thinking thing exists (The Cogito) | Deduction | God Exists ; External world exists (Ontological Argument) | Counter Arguments: Descartesââ¬â¢ intuitions and deduction donââ¬â¢t work Existence of self not known through reason ââ¬â Cogito only proves only the existence of thought, not a thinker e. g. BFG (Big Friendly Giant) Ontological Argument fails to prove the existence of God ââ¬â Only proves hypothetical existence ââ¬â Hume Proof for existence of external world depends on existence of a good God | Humeââ¬â¢s Fork Reason limited to tautologies/relations of ideas | No a priori knowledge ââ¬â Mill | Is certainty confined to introspection and the tautological? Key Terms | Introspection ââ¬â Looking inwards i. e. Internal experiences Tautology ââ¬â Saying the same thing twice E. g. Reverse Backwards (i. e. Analytic) | David Hume | Humeââ¬â¢s Fork Reason is limited to the meaning of words | Descartes | Experience is limited to immediate awareness We can never be sure that the external world corresponds to out experiences (we might be dreaming/demon) | Conclusions: David Hume | Yes | Humeââ¬â¢s Fork Only relations of ideas can be certain, all matters of fact are open to doubt | Descartes | No | Reason can discover certain knowledge of the world through intuition and deduction e. g. God exists | Kant | No | We can have certain synthetic a priori knowledge of our conceptual scheme e. g. We will perceive the world in space, time, causation | Yes | We can never know of the world of the noumena | Experience is intelligible due to a conceptual scheme: Kant | Mind is active ââ¬â Organises experience into categories e. g. Filing Cabinet Ordered into Space/ time/causal relations/unity Conceptual scheme > Universal, a priori, necessary | Implications | Synthetic a priori knowledge of the categories is possible e. g. Cookie cutter analogy ââ¬â Cutter is set (conceptual scheme), What it is cutting can change, but still get the same shape Only know the phenomena, never the noumena Fishing Net/Blue Spectacles Analogy | Saphir/Whorf | Experience is ordered due to the language that we use Linguistic relativism ââ¬â Societies organise experience by defining thing with words e. g. Inuit + Snow, and Hopi + Time Conceptual Scheme > A posteriori, relative contingent | Implications | World as it is is still unknowable No innate scheme, rather a range of different schemes |
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