philosophy
Philosophy 101, Summer Semester 2021
Handout #2
A. J. Ayer, Knowing as Having the Right to be Sure
· What is known should be true
· But this is not sufficient, not even if one adds that one must be sure of what one knows
· It is possible to be sure of something which is true, yet not to know it
· Consider case of man walking under ladder
· What is missing?
· He arrived at his conclusion by an unreliable process
· But what are the standards of reliability here?
· Question to ask: how do you know?
· Perception, testimony, memory all provide answers
· But whether they are good ones depends on the circumstances
· It’s not practical to draw up a general list of the conditions under which perception, testimony, and memory are reliable
· Moreover, one may know that P without being able to say how one knows it
· Consider someone who is amazingly reliable at predicting lottery results
· What, then, becomes of the distinction between knowledge and true belief?
· From the perspective of the person who knows, there may be no difference
· To say he knows is simply to concede him the right to be sure
· Where we draw the line is a matter of practical convenience
· In conclusion, these are the necessary and sufficient conditions for knowing that something is the case:
1. What one is said to know has to be true
2. One has to be sure of it
3. One has to have the right to be sure
· Many of the questions philosophers raise about the nature of knowledge thus turn out to be questions about the legitimacy to call something ‘knowledge’