Knowledge and certainty
- Key People:
- Aristotle
- Plato
- John Locke
- St. Augustine
- Immanuel Kant
- Related Topics:
- innate idea
- tabula rasa
- sensationalism
- coherentism
- foundationalism
- On the Web:
- The University of Sheffield - History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities - Epistemology (Oct. 30, 2024)
Philosophers have disagreed sharply about the complex relationship between the concepts of knowledge and certainty. Are they the same? If not, how do they differ? Is it possible for someone to know that p without being certain that p, or to be certain that p without knowing that p? Is it possible for p to be certain without being known by someone, or to be known by someone without being certain?
In his 1941 paper “Certainty,” Moore observed that the word certain is commonly used in four main types of idiom: “I feel certain that,” “I am certain that,” “I know for certain that,” and “It is certain that.” He pointed out that there is at least one use of “I know for certain that p” and “It is certain that p” on which neither of those sentences can be true unless p is true. A sentence such as “I knew for certain that he would come, but he didn’t,” for example, is self-contradictory, whereas “I felt certain he would come, but he didn’t” is not. On the basis of such considerations, Moore contended that “a thing can’t be certain unless it is known.” It is that fact that distinguishes the concepts of certainty and truth: “A thing that nobody knows may quite well be true but cannot possibly be certain.” Moore concluded that a necessary condition for the truth of “It is certain that p” is that somebody should know that p. Moore is therefore among the philosophers who answer in the negative the question of whether it is possible for p to be certain without being known.
Moore also argued that to say “A knows that p is true” cannot be a sufficient condition for “It is certain that p.” If it were, it would follow that in any case in which at least one person did know that p is true, it would always be false for anyone to say “It is not certain that p,” but clearly this is not so. If one says that it is not certain that Smith is still alive, one is not thereby committing to the statement that nobody knows that Smith is still alive. Moore is thus among the philosophers who would answer in the affirmative the question of whether it is possible for p to be known without being certain. Other philosophers have disagreed, arguing that if a person’s knowledge that p is occurrent rather than merely dispositional, it implies certainty that p.
The most radical position on such matters was the one taken by Wittgenstein in On Certainty. Wittgenstein held that knowledge is radically different from certitude and that neither concept entails the other. It is thus possible to be in a state of knowledge without being certain and to be certain without having knowledge. For him, certainty is to be identified not with apprehension, or “seeing,” but with a kind of acting. A proposition is certain, in other words, when its truth (and the truth of many related propositions) is presupposed in the various social activities of a community. As he said, “Giving grounds, justifying the evidence comes to an end—but the end is not certain propositions striking us immediately as true—i.e., it is not a kind of seeing on our part; it is our acting which lies at the bottom of the language game.”
The origins of knowledge
Philosophers wish to know not only what knowledge is but also how it arises. That desire is motivated in part by the assumption that an investigation into the origins of knowledge can shed light on its nature. Accordingly, such investigations have been one of the major themes of epistemology from the time of the ancient Greeks to the present. Plato’s Republic contains one of the earliest systematic arguments to show that sense experience cannot be a source of knowledge. The argument begins with the assertion that ordinary persons have a clear grasp of certain concepts—e.g., the concept of equality. In other words, people know what it means to say that a and b are equal, no matter what a and b are. But where does such knowledge come from? Consider the claim that two pieces of wood are of equal length. A close visual inspection would show them to differ slightly, and the more detailed the inspection, the more disparity one would notice. It follows that visual experience cannot be the source of the concept of equality. Plato applied such reasoning to all five senses and concluded that the corresponding knowledge cannot originate in sense experience. As in the Meno, Plato concluded that such knowledge is “recollected” by the soul from an earlier existence.
It is highly significant that Plato should use mathematical (specifically, geometrical) examples to show that knowledge does not originate in sense experience; indeed, it is a sign of his perspicacity. As the subsequent history of philosophy reveals, mathematics provides the strongest case for Plato’s view. Mathematical entities—e.g., perfect triangles, disembodied surfaces and edges, lines without thickness, and extensionless points—are abstractions, none of which exists in the physical world apprehended by the senses. Knowledge of such entities, it is argued, must therefore come from some other source.
Innate and acquired knowledge
The problem of the origins of knowledge has engendered two historically important kinds of debate. One of them concerns the question of whether knowledge is innate—i.e., present in the mind, in some sense, from birth—or acquired through experience. The matter has been important not only in philosophy but also, since the mid-20th century, in linguistics and psychology. The American linguist Noam Chomsky, for example, argued that the ability of young (developmentally normal) children to acquire any human language on the basis of invariably incomplete and even incorrect data is proof of the existence of innate linguistic structures. In contrast, the experimental psychologist B.F. Skinner (1904–90), a leading figure in the movement known as behaviourism, tried to show that all knowledge, including linguistic knowledge, is the product of learning through environmental conditioning by means of processes of reinforcement and reward. There also have been a range of “compromise” theories, which claim that humans have both innate and acquired knowledge.
Rationalism and empiricism
The second debate related to the problem of the origins of knowledge is that between rationalism and empiricism. According to rationalists, the ultimate source of human knowledge is the faculty of reason; according to empiricists, it is experience. The nature of reason is a difficult problem, but it is generally assumed to be a unique feature or faculty of the mind through which truths about reality may be grasped. Such a thesis is double-sided: it holds, on the one hand, that reality is in principle knowable and, on the other hand, that there is a human faculty (or set of faculties) capable of knowing it. One thus might define rationalism as the theory that there is an isomorphism (a mirroring relationship) between reason and reality that makes it possible for the former to apprehend the latter just as it is. Rationalists contend that if such a correspondence were lacking, it would be impossible for human beings to understand the world.
Almost no philosopher has been a strict, thoroughgoing empiricist—i.e., one who holds that literally all knowledge comes from experience. Even John Locke (1632–1704), considered the father of modern empiricism, thought that there is some knowledge that does not derive from experience, though he held that it was “trifling” and empty of content. Hume held similar views.
Empiricism thus generally acknowledges the existence of a priori knowledge but denies its significance. Accordingly, it is more accurately defined as the theory that all significant or factual propositions are known through experience. Even defined in that way, however, it continues to contrast significantly with rationalism. Rationalists hold that human beings have knowledge that is prior to experience and yet significant. Empiricists deny that that is possible.
The term experience is usually understood to refer to ordinary physical sensations—or, in Hume’s parlance, “impressions.” For strict empiricists, that definition has the implication that the human mind is passive—a “tabula rasa” that receives impressions and more or less records them as they are.
The conception of the mind as a tabula rasa posed serious challenges for empiricists. It raised the question, for example, of how one can have knowledge of entities, such as dragons, that cannot be found in experience. The response of classical empiricists such as Locke and Hume was to show that the complex concept of a dragon can be reduced to simple concepts (such as wings, the body of a snake, the head of a horse), all of which derive from impressions. On such a view, the mind is still considered primarily passive, but it is conceded that the mind has the power to combine simple ideas into complex ones.
But there are further difficulties. Empiricists must explain how abstract ideas, such as the concept of a perfect triangle, can be reduced to elements apprehended by the senses when no perfect triangles are found in nature. They must also give an account of how general concepts are possible. It is obvious that one does not experience “humankind” through the senses, yet such concepts are meaningful, and propositions containing them are known to be true. The same difficulty applies to colour concepts. Some empiricists have argued that one arrives at the concept of red, for example, by mentally abstracting from one’s experience of individual red items. The difficulty with that suggestion is that one cannot know what to count as an experience of red unless one already has a concept of red in mind. If it is replied that the concept of red and others like it are acquired when we are taught the word red in childhood, a similar difficulty arises. The teaching process, according to the empiricist, consists of pointing to a red object and telling the child “This is red.” That process is repeated a number of times until the child forms the concept of red by abstracting from the series of examples shown. But such examples are necessarily very limited: they do not include even a fraction of the shades of red the child might ever see. Consequently, it is possible for the child to abstract or generalize from them in a variety of different ways, only some of which would correspond to the way the community of adult language users happens to apply the term red. How then does the child know which abstraction is the “right” one to draw from the examples? According to the rationalist, the only way to account for the child’s selection of the correct concept is to suppose that at least part of it is innate.
Skepticism
Many philosophers, as well as many people studying philosophy for the first time, have been struck by the seemingly indecisive nature of philosophical argumentation. For every argument there seems to be a counterargument, and for every position a counterposition. To a considerable extent, skepticism is born of such reflection. Some ancient skeptics contended that all arguments are equally bad and, accordingly, that nothing can be proved. The contemporary American philosopher Benson Mates, who claimed to be a modern representative of that tradition, held that all philosophical arguments are equally good.
Ironically, skepticism itself is a kind of philosophy, and the question has been raised whether it manages to escape its own criticisms. The answer to that question depends on what is meant by skepticism. Historically, the term has referred to a variety of different views and practices. But however it is understood, skepticism represents a challenge to the claim that human beings possess or can acquire knowledge.
In giving even that minimal characterization, it is important to emphasize that skeptics and nonskeptics alike accept the same definition of knowledge, one that implies two things: (1) if A knows that p, then p is true, and (2) if A knows that p, then A cannot be mistaken (i.e., it is logically impossible that A is wrong. Thus, if people say that they know Smith will arrive at nine o’clock and Smith does not arrive at nine o’clock, then they must withdraw their claim to know. They might say instead that they thought they knew or that they felt sure, but they cannot rationally continue to insist that they knew if what they claimed to know turns out to be false.
Given the foregoing definition of knowledge, in order for the skeptical challenge to succeed, it is not necessary to show that the person who claims to know that p is in fact mistaken; it is enough to show that a mistake is logically possible. That condition corresponds to the second of the two clauses mentioned above. If skeptics can establish that the clause is false in the case of a person’s claim to know that p, they will have proved that the person does not know that p. Thus arises skeptics’ practice of searching for possible counterexamples to ordinary knowledge claims.
One variety of radical skepticism claims that there is no such thing as knowledge of an external world. According to that view, it is at least logically possible that one is merely a brain in a vat and that one’s sense experiences of apparently real objects (e.g., the sight of a tree) are produced by carefully engineered electrical stimulations. Again, given the definition of knowledge above, that kind of argument is sound, because it shows that there is a logical gap between knowledge claims about the external world and the sense experiences that can be adduced as evidence to support them. No matter how much evidence of this sort one has, it is always logically possible that the corresponding knowledge claim is false.
Avrum Stroll