نویسندگان: John Greco Sahar Joakim

کلید واژه ها: Epistemology Knowledge the Value Problem John Dewey American Pragmatism

حوزه های تخصصی:
شماره صفحات: ۵۳ - ۶۷
دریافت مقاله   تعداد دانلود  :  ۵۷

آرشیو

آرشیو شماره ها:
۴۴

چکیده

We value possessing knowledge more than true belief. Both someone with knowledge and someone with a true belief possess the correct answer to a question. Why is knowledge more valuable than true belief if both contain the correct answer? I examine the philosophy of American pragmatist John Dewey and then I offer a novel solution to this question often called the value problem of knowledge. I present and explicate (my interpretation of) Dewey’s pragmatic theory of inquiry. Dewey values competent inquiry and claims it is a knowledge-forming process, and I argue that it is competently conducting inquiry that explains why knowledge is more valuable than mere true belief. Knowledge is always the result of a process of competent inquiry (itself valuable) whereas belief can but need not be the result of inquiry. I end by considering and replying to reasonable objections to my pragmatic solution.

تبلیغات