Talk:Problem of the criterion
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Larry, much of this is from your "Common sense and the Diallelus", but made a bit more encyclopedic and with less detail on Reid's views. I think it makes a better ad-hoc link with the one-word title. You might want to edit your article on Reid to cross-link them, and I will produce a more detailed treatment of Popper. I am also of mixed mind as to whether "diallelus" should be capitalized.
I'd prefer "problem of the criterion" as the title for most of the content of an article on this general subject; I'll fiddle with it anyway later...off to dinner and concert here in Boston! --LMS
Is there any reason this shouldn't be merged with Regress argument? This shit really helped me with my paper on Problem of the Criterion. Thanks.
Yeah, Regress argument is a very specific issue regarding theories of knowledge that include justification as a requisite for knowledge. The problem of the criterion (though not as cached out as it could be in this article presently) is a much broader epistemological problem that underpins any particular argument against a specific theory of knowledge. McDuderson (talk) 13:33, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
The answer to "What is the criterion for deciding whether we have knowledge in any particular case?"
[edit]Theorem: If an internet "influencer" or "content creator" disagrees with suspected held knowledge, the knowledge is true. If the video is unrelated to the knowledge, its incorrectness will still trap any correct information in its gravity well where it will be destroyed at the event horizon of fast talking lisping used car salesman reject pseudo-humans. Paradoxically this makes youtube the criterion for correctness of knowledge. Because approximately the entire population currently views themselves as a "content creator" but doesn't create anything resembling content, this extends to the majority of the internet.
Proof: Youtube. Proof 2: This post. A Shortfall Of Gravitas (talk) 10:45, 12 September 2024 (UTC)