Any observation that doesn't rely on inference.
Maybe you can make an example we can analyze.
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- viole
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Any observation that doesn't rely on inference.
P = It's raining today. (when it is raining today).Maybe you can make an example we can analyze.
P = It's raining today. (when it is raining today).
Simple. Knowledge is that it's raining outside. The proposition that is true is knowledge.Good. Let's suppose that it is true that it is raining outside.
How do you gain knowledge that it is indeed the case that it is raining outside?
Because truth informs knowledge. Knowledge is belief that is true and justified.And once you did that, what makes you absolutely certain that your knowledge correspond to the truth?
Simple. Knowledge is that it's raining outside. The proposition that is true is knowledge.
Ontology and epistemology are two sides of the same coin. There is no existence without knowledge, or knowledge without existence. And the inference and the prediction, no matter how lovely they may be, can never be true, in my book, except loosely.I think we should not confuse ontology with epistemology. The proposition that it is raining outside is ontological. It exists a state of affairs so that it is raining outside. Epistemology deals with how we come to the knowledge that P is indeed true.
~P isn't P. Approximations, guesses (no matter how informed), and probability have only approximate truth value.Suppose I tell you that it is not raining outside. In other words, ~P = "it is not raining outside" is true and therefore knowledge.
Now what?
Ontology and epistemology are two sides of the same coin. There is no existence without knowledge, or knowledge without existence. And the inference and the prediction, no matter how lovely they may be, can never be true, in my book, except loosely.
~P isn't P. Approximations, guesses (no matter how informed), and probability have only approximate truth value.
What if you witnessed undeniable proof God exists. Would you hide it?
You may want to re-read the post beginning this thread, the ability to hide such evidence is implied in the question asked ("Would you hide it?"). That said, the notion of being able to provide undeniable proof of the existence of God is at best facetious, considering that it has eluded humankind since the dawn of our existence.I think the question is referring to the idea that an UNDENIABLE proof that God exists. Meaning, your attempt to hide it would prove useless.
What if you witnessed undeniable proof God exists. Would you hide it?
Like, going back in time?Catholics what if you witnessed undeniable proof that Mormons were right?
Like, going back in time?
Time travel's tentative, at best.
What if you witnessed undeniable proof God exists. Would you hide it?
I'm not. It was a question for discussion. This is a discussion forum.How would I know that the "proof" was undeniable? Exactly what sort of "proof" are you daydreaming about?