Article contents
Can a Justified Belief Be False?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
Extract
Edmund Gettier objects to analysing knowledge as justified true belief (JTB) on the ground that someone can justifiably infer a true conclusion from a justified false premise and hence not know the conclusion's truth, although the conclusion is justified. For instance, someone can justifiably deduce a true p v r from a justified but false p, where he has no justification for the true r. Gettier's objection draws on two assumptions: first, that a justified belief can be false; second, that a premise can justify a conclusion even though the premise is false.
Some JTB advocates grant the first assumption but deny the second. They usually concede the first assumption to protect the respectability of non-deductive inference. The argument is that if evidence e can nondeductively justify the conclusion c, then it must be possible for c to be justified and yet false, since e does not entail c. Although the assumption is sound, the argument as it stands fails to show it. But let us set this point aside for the moment.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Authors 1976
References
1 See “Is Justified True Belief Knowledge?”, Analysis 23 (1962-63), 121-23.
2 For instance, see Meyers, Robert G. and Stern, Kenneth “Knowledge without Paradox,” Journal of Philosophy 70 (1973), 147-60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 See Meyers-Stern, ibid, p. 148; also Pailthorp, Charles “Knowledge as Justified, True Belief”, Review of Metaphysics 23 (1969-70), pp. 28–29Google Scholar; Chisholm, Roderick M. “On the Nature of Empirical Evidence”, in Foster, L. and Swanson, J. W. (eds.) Experience and Theory (University of Massachussetts Press: 1970), p. 116.Google Scholar
4 See Hart, John A. and Dees, J. Gregory “Paradox Regained: A reply to Meyers and Stern,” Journal of Philosophy 71 (1974), 367-72Google Scholar; and Feldman, Richard “An Alleged Defect in Gettier Counter-Examples,” Australasian Journal of Philosophy 52 (1974), 68–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5 See “Justified True Belief as Knowledge,” Canadian Journal of Philosophy IV, (1974-5), 435-39.
6 Cp. Pailthorp, op. cit.
7 Op. cit., p. 439.
8 See “Defeasibility and Scepticism”, Australasian Journal of Philosophy 51 (1973), 238-44.
9 See “Truth and Evidence”, Philosophical Quarterly 24 (1974), 365-68.
10 Cp. Lehrer, Keith Knowledge(Clarendon Press: 1974), p. 48Google Scholar; Hoffmann, William E. “Aimeder on Truth and Evidence”, Philosophical Quarterly 25 (1975), 59–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
11 Cp. Moore, G. E. “Certainty”, in Philosophical Papers(London, Allen & Unwin: 1959), pp. 227-51.Google Scholar
12 Cf. Rozeboom, William W. “Why I Know So Much More Than You Do,” American Philosophical Quarterly 4 (1967), 281-90.Google Scholar
13 Cf. Pailthorp, op. cit., pp. 46–47.
14 See Unger, Peter Ignorance (Clarendon Press: 1975)Google Scholar, Ch. 7.
- 1
- Cited by