| | Mike wrote, Many people will, of course. Arguments, debates, are much like playing poker. "I'm sure" is analogous to "All in", meaning "I bet I'm right". In the case of argument often you don't even have to turn over your cards (check your premises) and all manner of evasions, rationalizations and fallacies can cover up the fact you might have bet wrong. It's all a game. Philosophers and objectivists can't get away with this, right? Right. You have to be intellectually honest about it. Of course, as you point out, one can say, I'm "sure" I'm right, meaning simply that I "bet" I'm right. But that's a different sense of "certain" than we've been using here. One can also say, I "know" I'm right, in the same way, which is a different sense of "know" than we've been using here.
Linda wrote, I understand your point. It's the same one you've been making all along. And it's a good one for your definition of "certain". We simply don't agree on that. I think we are putting such fine shadings of meaning on the word at this point that we're being silly. Even a dictionary, after all, allows wiggle room. Why else would there be definitions 1a, 1b, etc.? My "certain" has the flavor Mike spoke of, more like "fixed" or "decided" than like "correct". And I think that such a use is defensible considering the many and varied dictionary definitions one can find for "certain" and its relatives. Certainly! ;-)
But, if you acknowledge these different senses of "certain," then I take it that you're acknowledging the sense in which I'm using it, which is the strong epistemological sense. Do you not agree that, in this strong sense, to say "I'm certain" is analogous to saying "I know"? After all, you could make the same argument with respect to the term "know" that you're making with respect to the term "certain." The term "know" can also refer simply to a view that is "fixed" or "decided." Viz., I "know" the Lakers are going to beat the Pistons. Of course, I don't "know" it in the strong sense; nor am I "certain" of it in the strong sense, since I realize that I could be mistaken. The Lakers could conceivably lose to the Pistons.
But if I say that I'm 'certain' that the earth is round or that I 'know' that two plus two equal four, I'm using these terms in the strong sense, in which I don't believe that I could be mistaken. I thought it was this latter sense in which you were using these terms in your original argument.
In your previous post, you wrote, The difference is that saying that one is certain is making a statement about one's own state of mind alone. Saying that one knows is making a statement about one's own state of mind plus making a statement about the way things are. If saying "I'm certain that the earth is round" is not a statement about the way things are, then neither is saying "I know that the earth is round" a statement about the way things are. Certainty and knowledge refer only to one's state of mind. Or, as we say in philosophy, both are epistemological, not metaphysical. If one wanted to make a statement about the way things are, instead of about one's state of mind, one would say simply, "The earth is round," which says nothing about one's knowledge or belief. Of course, if one says it sincerely, then it constitutes an implicit claim to knowledge. If one didn't think that one knew the earth is round, one wouldn't say that it is round. One would say something less certain, such as that it is probably round.
So, I would say that if we are using the terms "certain" and "know" in their strong, epistemological sense, then they both imply a belief that one could not be mistaken. Another very fine shade here is the one about doubt. I think that I can have no doubt and yet admit that I might be wrong because I make no claim to perfection. When I say that I have no doubt, I'm saying that my brain has processed things in such a way that I have come to a sure conclusion about something. But why can't I also admit that my brain isn't perfect? I could have thought I saw something that wasn't, in fact, there. I could have forgotten something. I could have done any number of foolish things -- believe me! :-D To say your brain isn't perfect simply means that you can make mistakes under certain conditions -- that you're not infallible. But it doesn't mean that you can't acquire knowledge -- that you can't come to conclusions that aren't mistaken. It just means that you have to employ the proper validating process in order to ensure that your conclusions are correct. After all, you only know that you've made a mistake in judgment, because you were able to correct it -- because you were able to arrive at a true conclusion. It is only the recognition of a truth that can enable you to identify a falsehood.
- Bill
(Edited by William Dwyer on 11/21, 10:36am)
(Edited by William Dwyer on 11/21, 10:44am)
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