Economics Dictionary of Arguments

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Knowledge: Knowledge is the awareness or understanding of something. It can be acquired through experience, or education. Knowledge can be factual, procedural, or conceptual. See also Propositional knowledge, Knowledge how.
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Annotation: The above characterizations of concepts are neither definitions nor exhausting presentations of problems related to them. Instead, they are intended to give a short introduction to the contributions below. – Lexicon of Arguments.

 
Author Concept Summary/Quotes Sources

Hartry Field on Knowledge - Dictionary of Arguments

I 83
Knowledge/Logic/Field: logical knowledge: when logic is confined to the if-then form: then we have no knowledge about what does not follow.
>Implication
, >Conditional, >Logic.
Solution: differentiated deflationism: two parts:
(i) Knowledge, which mathematical statement follows from other mathematical statements.
(ii) additional knowledge about the consistency of mathematical statements (and other fundamental).

((s) Knowledge about consistency is no conclusion of something).
((s) Consistency/(s): is itself not a conclusion.)

Field: E.g. knowledge about all models is not a logical knowledge.
Syntactically: E.g. "There is a derivative of B from A": is not a logical knowledge, but knowledge about existence.
>Syntax.
Deflationism: both is logical knowledge.
VsDeflationism: the fundamental is metalogical.
>Deflationism.
I 88
Logical knowledge/Field/(s): knowledge about the fact that something is logically true (e.g. that axioms are consistent), but not the axioms themselves.
>Consistency, >Axioms, >Levels (Order).
FieldVsKripke: we then introduce a non-Kripkean concept of logical truth, according to which some non-trivial assertions about possibility are part of the logic.
Cf. >Truth/Kripke.
Then the consistency of axioms becomes a logical truth.
>Logical truth.
Induction/Field: extra-logical means: empirical, because we find no contradiction.
>Empiricism, >Contradictions, >Description levels, >Induction.
I 93
Knowledge/Possibility/Field: there is knowledge of possibility that is not only based on knowledge of necessity. - Only by thinking about the logical form.
Problem: E.g.: "There are at least 10 to the power of 10 to the power of 10 apples": every statement of the same logical form as this is also a logical truth. - (But in terms of content, it is wrong).
>Content.
Then one no longer had to rely on the actuality.
>Actuality, >Actualism, >Possible worlds, >Actual world.
Then it would be categorical knowledge.
E.g. apples/Field: here we have stronger reason to believe in the possibility than in the actuality. Field: but there are infinitely many physical entities: namely, space-time regions.
>Spacetime points, >Infinity.
I 94
Logical Knowledge/Frege: Problem, whereby do I know that it is logically possible that the axioms of quantum theory are true: by asserting that I know that there are actually entities asserted by the axioms.
>Platonism.
FieldVsFrege: if these entities existed, how could one know then that they are in this relationship and not in another?

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Explanation of symbols: Roman numerals indicate the source, arabic numerals indicate the page number. The corresponding books are indicated on the right hand side. ((s)…): Comment by the sender of the contribution. Translations: Dictionary of Arguments
The note [Concept/Author], [Author1]Vs[Author2] or [Author]Vs[term] resp. "problem:"/"solution:", "old:"/"new:" and "thesis:" is an addition from the Dictionary of Arguments. If a German edition is specified, the page numbers refer to this edition.

Field I
H. Field
Realism, Mathematics and Modality Oxford New York 1989

Field II
H. Field
Truth and the Absence of Fact Oxford New York 2001

Field III
H. Field
Science without numbers Princeton New Jersey 1980

Field IV
Hartry Field
"Realism and Relativism", The Journal of Philosophy, 76 (1982), pp. 553-67
In
Theories of Truth, Paul Horwich, Aldershot 1994


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