What does this mean? There's a difference between knowledge being genuine & being right? https://twitter.com/moz22/status/874665490894934016 …
Well, how are you defining these? If we know something to be true because it's genuine knowledge, the right opinion is that it's true.
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right opinion= true knowledge. its not a matter of justification or belief
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??? If you knowledge you have is true, your opinion is right, yes. Evidence is best way to this, not beliefs
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which tries to justify by using evidence as opposed to say intuition. the role of evidence isnt to justify though.
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Well, I'm an evidentialist then. If evidence shows the world to be a sphere & my intuitions say it's flat, my intuitions are wrong.
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Paging
@Intrinsic29 who is more equipped than me to address this issue. -
I read the thread and I can't make heads or tails on what he's trying to argue tbh.
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Me neither. Hoped it was just me & you would find some meaning there.
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I saw a claim that seems to imply intuition can substantiate propositions on its own though and that's false. Intuitions are just heuristics
End of conversation
New conversation -
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sorry for this. i dont want to come across as dismissive but its a bit hard to explain on twitter
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you have to read Plato in the meno. he gives the best example of it. if you accept that you move on and right opinion = true knowledge
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