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Knowledge and its Analysis

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  • About
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About the lecture

In this module, we think about the concept of knowledge and the analysis of a particular category of knowledge called ‘propositional knowledge’ (also known as ‘knowledge that’). In particular, we focus on: (i) the distinction between different kinds of knowledge – knowledge that (“I know that Napoleon died in 1824”), knowledge by acquaintance (“I know London”) and knowledge how (“I know how to ride a bicycle”); (ii) the relationship between being able to do something and knowing how to do it; (iii) the relationship between knowledge that and knowledge how; (iv) the idea of knowledge as a true belief; (v) the idea of ‘analysing’ a concept, i.e. identifying the necessary and sufficient conditions; (vi) the relationship between ‘knowing’ something implicitly and being able to put it into words; (vii) the truth condition for knowledge; (viii) the belief condition for knowledge; and (ix) the justification condition for knowledge, which completes the classical (tripartite) analysis of knowledge as a justified true belief.

About the lecturer

Dr Arif Ahmed is Reader in Philosophy at the University of Cambridge. He writes mainly on decision theory, but also has an interest in religion and has debated the subject against William Lane Craig, Tariq Ramadan, Rowan Williams and others. Some of his recent publications include (as editor) Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations: A Critical Guide (2010), Evidence, Decision and Causality (2014) and (as editor) Classical Philosophical Arguments: Newcomb's Problem (2018).

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Ahmed, A. (2021, January 02). Epistemology - Knowledge and its Analysis [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/epistemology?auth=0&lesson=3381&option=442&type=lesson

MLA style

Ahmed, A. "Epistemology – Knowledge and its Analysis." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 02 Jan 2021, https://massolit.io/options/epistemology?auth=0&lesson=3381&option=442&type=lesson