Mise
isle of lucy
I'm afraid I cannot follow this. You can't put it in better English?
Well it was my attempt at putting your original post in better English

I'm afraid I cannot follow this. You can't put it in better English?
I'm afraid I cannot follow this. You can't put it in better English?
The major (and crucial) difference between the two is that 'relative to human' is already inherently and logically tied to 'human', while 'fixed absolute truth regardless of human' isn't.
Eg, for a human it is true that if he picks up a rock and leaves it from some height, the rock will fall. Indeed, but you already have the human observed objects, places, and qualities such as volume and movement. Those are not needing to be there for any/all kinds of (non-human) observer.
Maybe are intuitions about "knowledge" are more simulation based then preposition based. A person is said to know something if his model matches the true system (and he has good reason to adopt said model).
I'm not sure why you didn't ask your question on the Ask A Theologian thread.
That was a simple example showing knowledge is based on definitions. Which (to my mind at least) shows knowledge needs to be defined precisely as well. Now there are two types of knowledge: scientific knowledge and religious knowledge and they rely on different definitions, both claiming truth. (Again: without a clear defintion neither knowledge would lead anywhere.)
"Now I know for a fact that..." is a statement. Is it based on any (solid) knowledge? Without any additional information we have no way of knowing. (Again: importance of definition.)
You really need to stop doing this mang; asking people for their input and then insulting them for providing that input is not going to make them want to participate.
Why is the 'good reason' necessary? Justifiability applies to humans. Who is to say that information doesn't become substance on some higher echelon of the quantum world, and that there aren't creatures who know things directly?
I don't mean to insult; arguing philosophy without drowning under the weight of the concepts takes experience. Nevertheless, if I can't understand something I can't understand it, and it's probably much ruder to ignore it.
Where did he write this?Robert Nozick came up with a reasonable explanation - in order to say 'S knows P', the following need to be true:
P is true
S believes that P
If it were the case that (not-P), S would not believe that P
If it were the case that P, S would believe that P
A major criticism of Nozick's theory of knowledge is his rejection of the principle of deductive closure. This principle states that if S knows X and S knows that X implies Y, then S knows Y. Nozick's truth tracking conditions do not allow for the principle of deductive closure. Nozick believes that the truth tracking conditions are more fundamental to human intuition than the principle of deductive closure.
Hmm, well, can't we infer that our universe isn't built around human perception? The further out we travel from our natural space, the more alien it becomes (take quantum physics as an example). We might not be able to properly conceive of the fixed reality, but we can comprehend it in metaphorical terms.
I watched this special on mathematics on pbs the other day and this was one of the main themes.
Is mathematics a human invention made to describe the world and universe around us, or is mathematics the actual rules that govern the universe?
Or put another way, is mathematics an invention or a discovery?
It really is a philosophical question cus on the one hand I say to you 2 + 2 = 4. If I have 2 apples and you give me 2 more I now have 4 apples. The notion and description is all human invented to describe our perception, but the fact that 2 apples added to 2 more apples is a fundamental truth of the universe.
I think to answer your question truth is what is actually true and knowledge is just awareness of that. So saying 2 + 2 = 4 is my knowledge of the mathematical truth that 2 + 2 = 4.
In the case of the barista problem I don't think she knew at all, because for one thing it concerns humans emotions and preferences not scientific truths. It is quite possible that even her regular customer did not want his regular order on that day. She didn't know, what she did was took the information she had on hand and made a best guess with it and said she knew.
And outside of scientific knowledge I don't know how you can absolutely define truth anyway. Let's say the regular thought he wanted his regular order, but a different waitress messed it up and served him something else which he liked better. And he exclaims, wow this is great, this is what I really wanted! His desire changed so how can you say 100% factually that you know his desired order? He might not even know what his desired order is, he just thinks he does.
The wikipedia article mentions that problem too:
Here X=heads, Y = "die < 5".