SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE
SOURCES
OF KNOWLEDGE
A plethora of
beliefs arise in people for a wide variety of causes, such as desires,
emotional needs, prejudices and biases of various kinds. But, when beliefs originate
in sources as these, they do not qualify as knowledge even if they happen to be
true. For true beliefs to assume the status of knowledge, it is necessary that
they originate in sources that afford us good reasons to consider them
reliable. These reliable sources are: perception, introspection, memory, testimony
and reason.
Perception
Perception is a
source of knowledge which employs our perceptual faculties, that is, our five
senses which are: sight, touch, hearing, smelling and taste. While a perceptual
experience is got by perceiving that there is a coffee on the table when indeed
there is a coffee on the table, a perceptual seeming perceives that a coffee is
on the table when indeed that is false. This aspect of perceptual seemings
invokes the idea of fallibility in perception. Perceptions are experiential,
and experience is a character of the world of flux, where things are today, and
not tomorrow, and where appearance may not always connote reality. The
structure of perceptual knowledge is held differently by direct and indirect
realists. For direct realists, perceptual knowledge is acquired by a direct
perception of the object in question. For indirect realists, perceptual
knowledge of objects is acquired by perceiving the sense data that represent
external objects. Thus, for direct realists, perception of external objects
give us foundational knowledge of external objects, while for indirect
realists, perception of external objects do not give us foundational knowledge
since knowledge of external objects is indirectly derived from our knowledge of
sense-data. However, the reliability of our perceptual faculties is
problematic. It seems our reliability is memorial, but can memory itself be
reliable? Are our memories of perceptual successes really what they are? Could
there no be memorial seemings just as there abounds perceptual seemings?
Introspection
Introspection is
the capacity to inspect the, metaphorically speaking, ‘inside’ of one’s mind.
Through introspection one is in epistemic possession of the mental states of a
person, like thirst, excitement, depression etc. When compared to perception,
introspection is less error prone, because it is internalist, mentalist, private,
and experientially unverifiable. Because of this, it has a special status. But,
could one introspectively seem to have a headache when in fact one does not?
Although it could be argued that error surfaces because of the difference
between appearance and reality, and since introspection lacks this, it is
incorrigible. But, it may still be asked, is it impossible to confuse an
unpleasant itch for a pain? Or a circular shape for an elliptical one? If
perception is not immune to error, it is difficult to understand how
introspection which provides the firm foundation for our beliefs can be error-proof.
Memory
Memory is the
capacity to retain knowledge acquired in the past. What one remembers, though,
need not be a past event. It may be a present fact, such as one’s telephone
number or a future event, such as the date of the next public lecture. Buy, not
every instance of taking oneself to remember that p, is an instance of actually
remembering that p. Hence, memory is fallible. We could think we remembered
that p when we actually seemed to remember that p. The distinctively epistemological
questions about memory are these: What makes memorial seemings a source of
justification? Is it a necessary truth that, if one has a memorial seeming that
p, one has thereby a prima facie
justification for p? Or is memory a source of justification only if, as
coherentists might say, one has reason to think that one’s memory is reliable?
Or is memory a source of justification only if, as externalists would say, it
is in fact reliable? Second, how can we respond to scepticism about knowledge
of the past? Memorial seemings of the past are both evident and rife, but do
not and cannot guarantee that the past is what we take it to be. Why, then,
should we think that memory is a source of knowledge about the past?
Testimony
Testimony differs
from other sources because it is not distinguished by having its own cognitive
faculty. Rather, to acquire knowledge of p via testimony is to come to know
that p on the basis of someone’s saying that p. Saying that p includes both
oral and written information from media or personal discussions. Knowing the
current time by asking someone the time is an example of testimonial knowledge.
Knowing of a brutal attack by reading a post or journal is also an example of a
testimonial knowledge.
Testimony raises the following
epistemological questions: Why is testimony a source of knowledge? Suppose you
hear p from someone but in fact that person is utterly unreliable as to the
question of whether p is the case or not? Even following the reliability requirement
of the externalists, suppose also that you have no evidential clue as to the
person’s reliability? Would it not
be plausible then to conclude that, since that person’s reliability is unknown
to you, that person’s saying that p does not put you in any position to know
that p? Even if as Thomas Reid suggests,
attributing reliability and credibility to non-contradicted testimonial sources
is a natural human attitude, what makes this attitude reasonable? If testimonial
sources have been shown to be fraught with error as above, is it still wise to
depend on it?
Reason
Reason as a source
of knowledge affords rational knowledge. This is knowledge afforded by an
unmediated employment of reason. Here, beliefs are justified solely by the use
of reason. Justification of this kind is said to be a priori: prior to any kind of experience. In a priori justification, s is justified a priori in believing that p if and only if s’s justification for
believing that p does not depend on any experience (be they perceptual,
introspective and memorial). Beliefs that are thus true and justified in this
way (and not somehow gettiered) would count as instances of a priori knowledge. A priori justification is one derived solely from the use of
reason.
Strengths
1)
Rational knowledge is a purer form of knowledge, because, it severs experience,
and as such is undiluted by perceptual, memorial and introspective seemings. It
is certain, beyond even the slightest doubt. Whereas what we believe, or even
know, on the basis of sense experience is at least somewhat uncertain.
2)
Rational knowledge has a universal and eternal character. If one person can
think it, so can everyone else, because, as Descartes says, reason is a
universally shared endowment.
3)
By using various tools of the mind (thinking, intuition, reasoning), one can
conceptualize and makes sense of the entire macrocosm of the universe.
4)
Rational knowledge is a worthy response to the sceptics. If nothing can be
known with certainty, say the sceptics, on the basis of the ephemerality of the
world, rational knowledge is not based on the experiential world, and so,
something can be known with certainty and assuredness.
Weaknesses
1)
A weakness of rationalism is that we cannot gain all knowledge through thinking.
I could think of a strawberry and how it would be but cannot imagine the taste.
Our brains do not have the capacity to create the taste. We could not simply
think "Yum strawberries taste delicious" because we do not
"know" how we would react to the strawberries taste. (I confused
myself)
2)
Rationalism is not useful in proving things to be true because it relies on
logic that may or may not be true in itself and cannot account for the real
world.
3)
For the sceptics, rational knowledge does not exist at all. Because, even mathematical,
geometrical and logical knowledge must in some way arise from experience. It is
by joining two things with two things that we know that 2+2=4.
4)
Every knowledge ought to be able to solve human problems. A knowledge that is
bereft of experience is unsuitable in solving problems concerning the world of
experience.
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