No, I didn't and no it doesn't.PeteOlcott wrote: ↑Wed Apr 03, 2019 12:27 am You just contradicted yourself, for indeed knowing anything at all
does constitute knowledge.
1. It only appears to be a symbolic contradiction, but it is not a semantic contradiction. I am just being inconsistent and I overloaded "knowing" ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_overload ).
But I didn't have to tell you that. You know that contradictions don't exist in reality, correct? Therefore an existing contradiction would be self-contradictory.
Q.E.D https://repl.it/repls/SourSelfishProblems
Code: Select all
$toggle = false
def a
$toggle = ( not $toggle )
end
a and ( not a )
=> true
2. Knowing anything/something may be a member of the Knowledge-set, but it does not constitute the set in its entirety/completeness. Some knowledge is worthless.
Example:I know that tomorrow I may or may not die.
It has no undistributed middle. It's true and it's justified, because all men are mortal.
If that's knowledge - I prefer toilet paper.
Knowing truisms is worthless knowledge. Truisms do not contain any useful information.
If you were to say to me "Black is not white" what you are giving me is information about your own mind. You can draw two distinctions. Black and white. Your mind can measure up to 1 bit of precision.
Until you provide an ostensive definition for "black" and "white" and we agree to the meaning of those terms we are not on the same page.