Kylie wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:27 pm
historia wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 12:51 pm
First, we don't typically draw a distinction between belief and knowledge when it comes to other controversial issues. We don't, for example, categorize people as "gnostic pro-choice" or "agnostic pro-choice" or as a "gnostic evolutionist" or an "agnostic evolutionist."
Well, why not?
Because it's not particularly useful.
Note, the issue here is not whether it could,
in theory, be done -- it's logically possible to categorize any position along any number of dimensions, including "pro-pineapple-on-pizza evolutionist" (the correct position, BTW). The point here is that we we don't,
in practice, do this with either pineapples or knowledge, because it's just adding noise to our data.
Kylie wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:27 pm
historia wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 12:51 pm
I suspect that many, if not most, people haven't given much thought to issues of epistemology, so asking them to assess whether their beliefs on a controversial issue somehow constitute knowledge or not isn't going to tell us much about their position on that controversial issue.
Oh come on, it's not that hard. You are just asking them, "Do you consider that you KNOW this to be true, or not?"
It's easy to ask the question. The hard part is that you're going to get incongruent answers in return. Consider the fact that you have yourself used the term "knowledge" in at least three different (conflicting) ways just in the course of our conversation.
Kylie wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:27 pm
historia wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 12:51 pm
Right, so when people describe what they
believe in, they tend to use the word "know" in this looser way, as indicating that the belief is reasonable or supported by arguments, evidence, or experience. Believers do this for God.
But when you ask non-believers whether they "know" God
doesn't exist, they tend to switch to a much narrower sense of "knowledge" as meaning not
possibly being wrong.
Not from their point of view - which is what I am asking about.
Okay, but the point I'm making here is that, if believers and non-believers are using the word "know" in different senses, then the label "gnostic" is being applied inconsistently across the scheme. If it spans everything from "I just feel it must be true" to "doesn't meet the burden of absolute proof" it's not very useful.
Kylie wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:27 pm
historia wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 12:51 pm
In his article
What I Believe But Cannot Prove -- which is broadly relevant to our discussion of knowledge so worth reading in whole -- Sean Carroll makes this same point:
Carroll wrote:
The young Wittgenstein would not admit to Bertrand Russell that there was not a rhinoceros in the room, because he couldn’t be absolutely sure (in the sense of logical proof) that his senses weren’t tricking him. But the later Wittgenstein understood that taking such a purist stance renders the notion of "to know" (or "to believe") completely useless. If logical proof were required, we would only believe logical truths — and even then the proofs might contain errors. But in the real world it makes perfect sense to believe much more than that. So we take "I believe x" to mean, not "I can prove x is the case," but "it would be unreasonable to doubt x."
By this logic, we can't know anything at all.
Yeah, that's nearly the
opposite of what Carroll is saying here. But it depends on how one defines "knowledge," which is kinda the problem with using that as a dimension on which to categories people's opinions.
Kylie wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:27 pm
Most people take "agnostic" to be someone who isn't sure if there's a God, or someone who thinks that the existence of God is unknowable. I do not hold either of these positions, yet your argument would label me as an agnostic.
Well, if you are "as sure that there is no Go[d] as I'm sure that there isn't an elephant in my front yard," as you said above, then it seems you should be able to affirm the proposition that God doesn't exist and be classified as an atheist on the old scheme.
Again, you don't need to be 100% certain that a proposition is true to affirm it.
Kylie wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:27 pm
And your system does not actual describe the difference between the two people I spoke of, it just lumps them together under the same umbrella, despite the fact that the difference between their positions is, I'd say, fairly important. Yet my system describes this easily.
It does? Here are the two positions again:
Kylie wrote: ↑Sat Sep 03, 2022 11:36 pm
There's a person who thinks that the issue of God's existence is inherently unknowable. They claim to KNOW that God's existence is always going to be unknowable. There's another person who, similarly, can't say if God exists or not, but they do NOT think that God's existence is inherently unknowable.
On the scheme you are proposing, wouldn't both of these positions be described as "agnostic atheist"?
Kylie wrote: ↑Sat Sep 03, 2022 11:36 pm
Also, the term "agnostic" means that there is also "gnostic", which your system doesn't use at all.
Yeah, the term
gnostic doesn't typically mean "having knowledge." There's not even an entry for that in Websters. Using non-standard definitions is not a feature of your proposed scheme, it's a bug.