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Single Idea 6273

[filed under theme 13. Knowledge Criteria / C. External Justification / 7. Testimony ]

Full Idea

Our ability to picture how people are likely to respond may well be innate; indeed, our disposition to believe what other people tell us (which is fundamental to knowledge) could hardly be an inference, as that isn’t good enough for knowledge.

Gist of Idea

Knowledge depends on believing others, which must be innate, as inferences are not strong enough

Source

Hilary Putnam (Meaning and the Moral Sciences [1978], Lec VI)

Book Ref

Putnam,Hilary: 'Meaning and the Moral Sciences' [RKP 1981], p.74


A Reaction

An interesting claim. There could be an intermediate situation, which is a hard-wired non-conscious inference. When dismantled, the 'innate' brain circuits for assessing testimony could turn out to work on logic and evidence.


The 22 ideas from 'Meaning and the Moral Sciences'

A culture needs to admit that knowledge is more extensive than just 'science' [Putnam]
We need the correspondence theory of truth to understand language and science [Putnam]
In Tarski's definition, you understand 'true' if you accept the notions of the object language [Putnam]
Tarski has given a correct account of the formal logic of 'true', but there is more to the concept [Putnam]
The claim that scientific terms are incommensurable can be blocked if scientific terms are not descriptions [Putnam]
Only Tarski has found a way to define 'true' [Putnam]
The correct translation is the one that explains the speaker's behaviour [Putnam]
How reference is specified is not what reference is [Putnam]
Knowledge depends on believing others, which must be innate, as inferences are not strong enough [Putnam]
Empathy may not give knowledge, but it can give plausibility or right opinion [Putnam]
'True' and 'refers' cannot be made scientically precise, but are fundamental to science [Putnam]
You can't decide which explanations are good if you don't attend to the interest-relative aspects [Putnam]
Theory of meaning presupposes theory of understanding and reference [Putnam]
Truth conditions can't explain understanding a sentence, because that in turn needs explanation [Putnam]
Language maps the world in many ways (because it maps onto other languages in many ways) [Putnam]
Realism is a theory, which explains the convergence of science and the success of language [Putnam]
If a tautology is immune from revision, why would that make it true? [Putnam]
'The rug is green' might be warrantedly assertible even though the rug is not green [Putnam]
Correspondence between concepts and unconceptualised reality is impossible [Putnam]
You can't say 'most speaker's beliefs are true'; in some areas this is not so, and you can't count beliefs [Putnam]
A private language could work with reference and beliefs, and wouldn't need meaning [Putnam]
We should reject the view that truth is prior to meaning [Putnam]