Knowledge-Closure and Inferential Knowledge
Knowledge-Closure and Inferential Knowledge
Author(s): Guido MelchiorSubject(s): Philosophy
Published by: KruZak
Keywords: closure; epistemology; inference; knowledge
Summary/Abstract: Closure is the principle that a person, who knows a proposition p and knows that p entails q, also knows q. Closure is usually regarded as expressing the commonplace assumption that persons can increase their knowledge through inference from propositions they already know. In this paper, I will not discuss whether closure as a general principle is true. The aim of this paper is to explore the various relations between closure and knowledge through inference. I will show that closure can hold for two propositions p and q for numerous different reasons. The standard reason that S knows q through inference from p, if S knows p and knows that p entails q, is only one of them. Therefore, the relations between closure and inferential knowledge are more complex than one might suspect.
Journal: Croatian Journal of Philosophy
- Issue Year: X/2010
- Issue No: 30
- Page Range: 87-113
- Page Count: 27
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF