What Is Knowledge?
What Is Knowledge?
What Is Knowledge?
We can have beliefs and still lack knowledge if our beliefs are false.
Unfortunately, we can also have true beliefs and still lack knowledge
because we fail to understand how and why a belief is true. Justification
involves finding such an understanding.
The questions concerning knowledge and human knowing have been
perennial problems of philosophy. Different philosophers have provided
different answers to these questions. Needless to say, we cannot hope to
comprehend these difficult questions in a few paragraphs.
Cognitional Structure
Bernard Lonergan
Theories of Knowledge
Empiricism
Rationalism
Skepticism
Idols of the Cave – if the “idols of the tribe” deceive humankind, each
individual must reckon with his peculiar prejudices, which Bacon called
“idols of the cave”. Here Bacon recalls Plato’s allegory in which people
imprisoned in a cave mistake appearance for reality. Each of us has
criticized blind spots. Bacon recommends that we treat with special
suspicion any outlook that gives us special satisfaction. We tend to believe
what we like to believe, but that path does not lead to knowledge.
Idols of the Marketplace – these are errors that emerge from the words we
use in everyday business, from the association of men with one another.
Their meanings are often vague and ambiguous, but they solidify our
impressions and beliefs nonetheless. “Men converse by means of language;
but words are imposed according t the understanding of the crowd; and
there arises from a had and inept formation of words, a wonderful
obstruction to the mind”. Bacon stresses that, “unless we guard against the
ill and unfit choice of words, their impact cam force and overrule the
understanding and throw all into confusion.
Idols of the Theater – these are idols, which have migrated into men’s kind
from the various dogmas of philosophers and also from wrong laws of
demonstration. Many philosophical speculations claim to be true accounts
of reality, but in fact, they are closer to stage plays depicting unreal worlds
of human creation. Specifically, Bacon faults three types of false philosophy.
Exemplified by Aristotle, the first trusts non-empirical inference too much;
its result is sophistry. Although experimental, the second draws from
sweeping conclusions from too little data; its result is psuedoscience. The
third mixes philosophy and religion indiscriminately; its result superstition.
VALIDITY OF KNOWLEDGE
Lesson 4 – Display
The previous discussions has given us enough idea that man indeed
can know something as exemplified by the different theories of knowledge
and the philosophical ways in acquiring knowledge. As we have defined
earlier, knowledge is a justified true belief. This clearly states that it is not
enough to claim that we have knowledge of certain matters. It further
obliges us to establish justification of those claims we assert. This points out
the need for criteria by which our knowledge can be judged as true or false.
Different criteria such as customs, traditions, consensus of majority can be
cited but the following discussion will deal more on the philosophical criteria
in validating knowledge.
Correspondence theory
This theory holds that true or valid knowledge is what
conforms or corresponds to facts or agrees which objective
reality. This criteria of knowledge recognizes the interplay
between the idea or belief that we claim to know and the facts
themselves. The facts are neither true nor false but it is the
knowledge or claim asserted about them. If I claim and say that BELTRAND
Pedro is tall and it correspond to the objective and factual reality RUSSEL
of Pedro, then it is true; otherwise, it is false. Thus, a valid knowledge is that
which corresponds to reality.
One of the defenders of this theory is Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)
and he philosophized that true knowledge is the fact corresponding to the
belief. Mind does not create truth or falsehood. They create beliefs, but when
once the beliefs are created, the mind cannot make them true or false,
except in the special case where they concern future things which are within
the power of person believing, such as catching trains. What makes a belief
true is a fact.
Coherence theory
This theory asserts the validity of knowledge if there is consistency.
The knowledge that we claim is counted to be true when it finds harmony or
consistency with other claims or ideas. If it fails to do so, then such claim
finds no truth but falsity. To establish that knowledge is true does not give
emphasis on the interplay between the facts or objective reality, as
correspondence theory would put it. Truth or falsity of the ideas or the
judgment we assert depends on its consistency with other judgments. So far
as I make the judgment that Pedro is a good man is consistent with other
judgments that he is indeed good, such judgments finds it meaning and
truth. This coherence theory is substantiated with the use of Logic for
validity of judgments can be evaluated from the logical relations or
consistency of those judgments. Thus, truth or falsity of the knowledge that
we claim to believe is established along with its coherence or consistency
with other claims.
Pragmatic Theory
Pragmatic theory of knowledge claims that true and valid knowledge is
one which is practical or useful. No matter how great an idea is, what
concerns for the pragmatists is how our ideas, beliefs, or knowledge is
useful and beneficial in its own way. Pragmatism considers the relativity of
knowledge for what works in one instance may not be to all. Once
knowledge does not lead to good consequences, knowledge is deemed
worthless, hence, false and unacceptable. True and valid knowledge then is
what works. Among the philosophers with pragmatic views include: William
James, John Dewey and Charles Pierce.
Additional Reading:
Epistemological Skepticism by C.E.M. Joad (1891-1953)