Knowledge And Certainty
Year:
2008Published in:
Philosophical IssuesWhat is the connection between knowledge and certainty? The question is vexed, in part because there are at least two distinct senses of" certainty". According to the first sense, subjective certainty, one is certain of a propo sition if and only if one has the highest degree of confidence in its truth. According to the second sense of" certainty", which we may call epistemic certainty, one is certain of a proposition p if and only if one knows that p (or is in a position to know that p) on the basis of evidence that gives one the highest degree of justification for one's belief that p. The thesis that knowledge requires certainty in either of these two senses has been the basis for skeptical arguments. For example, according to one kind of skeptical argument, knowledge requires epistemic certainty, and being epistemically certain of a proposition requires having independent evidence that logically entails that proposition.
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