Archive for May, 2006

X-Men

Tickets for 4 to see X-Men 3 on opening night in IMAX glory: $48.

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Epistemology

Knowing
1: Epistemology 2: Flux Capacity 3: Correspondence 4: Synthetic & Metaphor 5: Postmortem Epistemology

What is ? Beyond that, what is truth? In other words, what makes something knowable and/or true? With regards to knowledge, how should we classify things? Is anything knowable? If so, what parts? These are all questions that tie into the general category of epistemology and will be pursued in subsequent posts. First, though, we should get some definitions cleared up.

Truth

What kind of things can be true? For our purposes, “kinds of things” will be grouped into two categories: real objects and assertions. Real objects are things like this computer you are looking at and the person who wrote this (i.e. me). Assertions are things such as propositions (such as the infamous “If P then Q”), statements (”The earth is round”), beliefs (”i believe i am alive”). Can real objects be true? If i were to say something falsely (e.g. “Man was created by aliens from the Orion Nebula”), am i true (or not)? Or is it that my statement is true (or not). It seems, then, that real objects cannot be true or false, but assertions can. With that in mind, we will restrict our enquiry to assertions.

Now, there are three general theories of and each has good points and bad ones:

  • : This is basically such that an assertion is true if and only if (or, iff) it corresponds to the way things actually are in the world. In computer lingo, that’s similar to WYSIWYG. The good is that it is intuitive with regards to perception (after all, it’s what you see), but it’s impossible to prove (there is no way to “step outside” and verify). For example, this screen that you are seeing exists because you see it.
  • : This differs from the above in that an assertion is true iff it consists with one’s already true beliefs. In other words, if an assertion is coherent with one’s set of beliefs, it is true. The downside is that it is not so intuitive when it comes to perception, but chances are, this is how most people in practice call something true. To re-use the example above, this screen exists because it is more in line with your other beliefs (such as the one that you are reading this on a screen) without contradicting them.
  • Pragmatism: The last general theory of truth comes down to practicality. William James wrote “what works satisfactorily in the widest sense of the word.” That is, if it works best to assume this screen does in fact exist, then believe that it does. This may best be seen in the abundance of Euclidean geometry in grade school because it works better to assume that parallel lines never meet that the opposite (although that opposite is required to be assumed when discussing atomic bombs).

Generally, though, most do not hold to just one of these theories, but work them together in some way to create a more plausible notion of truth.

Knowledge

This is what is primarily about. What constitutes “knowing”? There are two generic theories of this as well:

  • : This is found must notably in Descartes’ writings. There are some assertions that are foundational to others. Knowledge is constructed as a pyramid of sorts where the most basic assertions are required for others. If one of these basic assertions is removed, the structure collapses like a house of playing cards. Many foundationalists hold to Correspondence from above.
  • Coherentism: This should not be confused with coherence from above even though the two are related. Here, knowledge is not a structure of assertions, but a web of them. While a single assertion may be open to doubt, when it is combined with others, the interlocking strength bolsters each other. It is akin to a crossword puzzle where more answers means a greater likelihood of being correct on one particular answer.While much of the forthcoming discussion will be focusing on foundationalism, it should be important to notice where coherentism can enter into the mix.

Foundationalism began with the simple assertion that an assertion is known if and only if the assertion is true and the knower believes that assertion. For instance, i know that i have a cat if and only if i really do have a cat and i believe that i do have a cat. See how correspondence fits nicely into this argument as i can then assert that “i really do have a cat” because i am in possession of one. Yet, there is difficulty here because of “lucky guesses.” Let’s say we are playing a game and you tell me to tell you how many straws you are holding behind your back. If i were to guess correctly, it is hardly the case that i knew it. i just guessed and happened to be right. It doesn’t seem wise to consider my guess knowledge. Also, what if i were to walk into a room and the clock read “2:02 pm,” but it was stopped at that time. If i believed it to be 2:02 pm and it happened to be such, can that still be considered knowledge? Or, was it that i was just lucky for believing it to be that time. After all, if it were in actuality 3:21 am, i would have been wrong. The problem is that my justification for my belief was faulty. i was right, but not for the right reason.

Justified

For that reason, foundationalists modified their theory a little to try to iron out those two difficulties. The result is called . Here, a person knows an assertion if and only if, like above, it is true and she believes it, but also that she has justification for believing it. In other words, there is some evidence to believe the assertion. In this way, consequential assertions (such as the stopped clock and the guessing game) are excluded from knowledge. Beyond that, even pre-conceived assertions are excluded. For example, let’s take the OJ Simpson case. Let’s assume that someone (say, OJ’s father), before the trial even started, said that he believed OJ to be innocent regardless of the trial. Once the trial ended and OJ was declared innocent, that additional evidence would not have mattered to OJ’s father. Regardless of the trial, OJ’s father would have believed OJ to be innocent, even if he had no evidence to do so. Justified True Belief removes that from possibly being an object of knowledge. But, there are some problems with it. Edmund Gettier has given us a really good example of this.

Let’s say Mr. Smith has a family. Mr. Smith’s daughter tells him that she just bought a car. She is honest and he sees no reason to believe she is deceiving him. Therefore, Smith’s belief that his daughter bought a car should count as a true belief (and therefore, knowledge). Because of that, Mr. Smith is also justified in believing that “a family member just bought a car.” Yet here’s the rub: Smith’s daughter is lying to him in order to cover up the fact that Smith’s wife bought a car for Smith for his birthday. Now, it is still true that “a member of Smith’s family bought a car” and Smith still believes it. Smith even has justification for believing it, but we don’t want to call this knowledge because the justification is still faulty even though it gives the same result. As a result, more refinements of the foundationalist theory comes from an attempt to restrict knowledge to assertions that are justified via correct and true justifications, but none have completely escaped Gettier’s counterexamples yet.

In the upcoming posts, we will look at some major thinkers and their contributions to epistemology and hopefully come to some conclusions as to what is known, what can be known, and how do those relate to truth.

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More Spring reading

  1. Read for Nietzsche Study:
    • Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche
    • The Antichrist, Nietzsche
    • Thus Spake Zarathustra, Nietzsche, books I & II
    • On the Genealogy of Morals, Nietzsche
    • Total Presence, Thomas Altizer
    • Nietzsche & Christianity, Karl Jaspers
    • Erring: A Postmodern A/Theology, Mark Taylor
    • Nietzsche, Heidegger (selections)
    • Kierkegaard & Nietzsche, J. Kellenberger
  2. Read for Fundamentalism
    • Terror in the Mind of God, Mark Juergensmeyer
    • Islamic Fundamentalism Since 1945, Beverley Milton-Edwards
  3. Fun Reading
    • Republic, Plato
    • Apology, Plato
    • Phaedo, Plato
    • Cratylus, Plato
    • Parmenides, Plato
    • Timaeus, Plato
    • Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Hume
  4. Misc. Reading
    • Cost of Discipleship, Dietrich Bonhoeffer
    • On Certainty, Wittgenstein
    • Primer on Postmodernism, Stan Grenz
    • Eldest, Christopher Paolini

Almost finished everything required for classes…and one week left.  Also, it looks like i will not be doing both degrees, so the “Reading for Comprehensive Exam” is now “Fun Reading.”  i am finalizing my paper topics today and it looks like they will be on:

  • Nietzsche’s (non-)relation to Christianity.  This is for my Nietzsche study and will argue that Nietzsche’s critique of Christianity is no longer applicable to today.
  • How fundamentalism influences the mainstream.  This is for my fundamentalism class and will look at how fundamentalist ideologies shape the mainstream counterparts in both Christian and Muslim circles.
  • Knowledge without perception.  This is for my epistemology class and will discuss the possibility of knowledge without perception, building off of Plato’s Theaetetus, Hume’s Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, and Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations.
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Disproving Dan

One thing that really gets me upset is when pastor-type people try too hard to “refute” The Da Vinci Code stuff.  For instance, Sunday i was at a church in Michigan and the preacher said things to the effect of:

  • Because there are actually 673 panes of glass on the pyramid at the Louvre (and not 666 as Brown states in the book), the book is wrong.  And even that is wrong as the Louvre’s website (link) states (Virtual Tours->Architectural Views->Cour Napoleon) that the pyramid in question has “almost 800 glass lozenges and triangles.”
  • “Jehovah” is a Latin creation of Brown to confuse matters on the Hebrew YHWH.  The preacher (who has studied OT Hebrew!) does not realize that “Jehovah” was the original attempt at pronouncing YHWH by adding the vowels that aren’t present.  It wasn’t until later that scholars though that “Yahweh” was more accurate.
  • Because the movie crew could not film at Westminster Abbey (minor location in the book for a major artifact in the quest), Brown must be wrong.

Now, i agree that Dan Brown was a bit far-fetched and had very little understanding in what he was writing, but this zealousness to disprove a work of fiction is a bit much.  Give it a rest.

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Ancient Future Interpretation

Language & Interpretation
1: Language 2: Post-whatever 3: Liquidity 4: Ancient Future Interpretation

The last part of this series turns us from what is to how do we use it, particularly in a “” context. Previously, i outlined the liquidity of language and its meaning. In the religious context, how should people interpret their “Scriptures” whether that be the Qur’an, the Bible, or the Upanishads. My answer would be “historically.”

Ancient

The first thing we should do when interpreting a book (or even a conversation) is that we should place it in its context. For instance, in the Book of Mark, how should Jesus’ reference to the “” be seen? Geza Vermes, in his book Jesus the Jew, suggests that “son of man” was an Aramaic idiom simply referring to the person speaking (and also sometimes the person spoken to). In his view, this phrase has no connection whatsoever with Daniel 7, 1 Enoch, or 2 Esdras (the only three locations in what can be called “Scripture” in Jesus’ time where the phrase is used). This view is further supported by going to the claims in 1 Enoch and 2 Esdras. In 1 Enoch, the “son of man” is directly referred to as Enoch himself. To use it as support for some eschatological figure would quickly remove Jesus from the possibility of being that figure. In 2 Esdras, the references to the “son of man” shed no new light on this figure. Furthermore, 2 Esdras is believed to have been written after Jesus was resurrected, thus making it an unlikely source for confirmation. We are left with Daniel 7. Looking at the rabbinic teachings of the era (i.e. the Talmud and the Mishnah), it is seen that none of the rabbis prior to the late 1st century saw the “son of man” in Daniel 7 as some kind of prophecy, let alone one about the . It is not until the 1st century (which is when Mark is written) that we see a shift in understanding. First Christians and then Jews began to re-interpret Daniel 7 as a prophecy of the Messiah.

Textually, scholars have suggested that, of the 70+ references to the “son of man” in the 4 gospels, only 5 bear any kind of relation to Daniel 7…and none of those were spoken by . Therefore, it would appear that at the earliest context, “son of man” was not a reference to the Messiah and only became such after Christianity. As such, i suggest that we should not take statements of Jesus in the Gospel as allusions to a greater figure.

Traditional

In the Christian tradition, the idiomatic interpretation of “son of man” has disappeared. Most would see “son of man” as a direct reference to Daniel 7 and the eschatological figure. As such, we should take this when reading it after the gospels, as it is what most Christians believed.

Futural

While this view of interpretation seems rather oddly named because it focuses on both the historical application and contextual usage, it also becomes futural in that it changes. Interpretations change to fit the language and culture of the day, but the message itself does not. With an understanding of the development of ideas, it is easy to see how some views that are proclaimed as historically accurate but have little historical basis (e.g. premillenialism, but that’s another topic!). Furthermore, it is a way to retain historical orthodoxy without excluding the contemporary culture.

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Libuhral

You are a
Social Liberal
(78% permissive)

and an…
Economic Moderate
(43% permissive)

You are best described as a:
Democrat
Link: The Politics Test on Ok Cupid
Also: The OkCupid Dating Persona Test

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Change of Plans

After talking with a couple of faculty in my two programs, things may be changing.  First off, the requirement for my second MA (Philosophy) isn’t what i was led to believe (30 hours) and is in fact a full 45 hours.  As a result, that means there is no chance of finishing up next Spring.  Talking with my advisor, a second MA (especially one in Philosophy) won’t help in getting into theological programs, which is what i want to do.

So that means that if i choose to skip the second program, i only need 6 hours (that’s not even 2 courses) to complete my course requirements.

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Uninstalling Heimdal/Mambo Plus

i have gotten a couple of emails from people wanting to know how to uninstall the phpBB and Joomla/Mambo integration from me. Here’s the basics:

  1. Backup your database
  2. Duplicate mos_users (or jos_users) as phpbb_users (in phpMyAdmin, this can be done by going to the mos_users table and under the “operations” tab, there is the option of “copy table to…”)
  3. DROP mos_session (or jos_session)
  4. Using installation/sql/schema.sql (from a Mambo/Joomla package), re-create the mos_session (or jos_session) table (see below for latest)
  5. Using install/sql/mysql_schema.sql (from phpBB package), recreate phpbb_sessions (see below for latest)
  6. In mos_users (or jos_users)
    • RENAME user_email to email, user_password to password, user_id to id, user_active to block, and user_actkey to activation
    • REMOVE any other user_* fields;
    • UPDATE mos_users SET block = NOT block;
    • DELETE FROM mos_users WHERE id = -1;
  7. In phpbb_users, REMOVE name, gid, registerDate, lastvisitDate, usertype, sendEmail, and params
  8. Overwrite Mambo/Joomla files being used with “original” files from Mambo/Joomla package (you can just upgrade here to the latest Mambo/Joomla)
  9. Either overwrite phpBB files with a clean package, or remove the changes that are noted in the phpbb files (can be found from the docs/mod_phpbb.txt file in the mosplus and heimdal packages). Each modification for phpBB is noted in the file by the usage of:
    // mod: Heimdal ------------
    ....
    // fin mod: Heimdal -----------

For quick reference, here are the session tables’ structures:

-- Table structure for table `jos_session`
CREATE TABLE `jos_session` (
`username` varchar(50) default '',
`time` varchar(14) default '',
`session_id` varchar(200) NOT NULL default '0',
`guest` tinyint(4) default '1',
`userid` int(11) default '0',
`usertype` varchar(50) default '',
`gid` tinyint(3) unsigned NOT NULL default '0',
PRIMARY KEY (`session_id`),
KEY `whosonline` (`guest`,`usertype`)
) TYPE=MyISAM;

-- Table structure for table `phpbb_sessions`
CREATE TABLE phpbb_sessions (
session_id char(32) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
session_user_id mediumint(8) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL,
session_start int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL,
session_time int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL,
session_ip char(8) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL,
session_page int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL,
session_logged_in tinyint(1) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL,
session_admin tinyint(2) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (session_id),
KEY session_user_id (session_user_id),
KEY session_id_ip_user_id (session_id, session_ip, session_user_id)
);

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Spring minus three

  1. Read for Knowledge Problems:
    • An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, David Hume
    • Philosophical Investigations, Wittgenstein
  2. Read for Nietzsche Study:
    • Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche
    • The Antichrist, Nietzsche
    • On the Genealogy of Morals, Nietzsche
    • The Gay Science, Nietzsche
    • Beyond Good and Evil, Nietzsche
    • Nietzsche and Christianity, Karl Jaspers
    • Total Presence, Thomas Altizer
    • Erring: A Postmodern A/Theology, Mark Taylor
    • Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, J. Kellenberger
  3. Read for Fundamentalism
    • Terror in the Mind of God, Mark Juergensmeyer
    • Islamic Fundamentalism Since 1945, Beverley Milton-Edwards
  4. Read for Comprehensive Exam
    • Republic, Plato
    • Apology, Plato
    • Phaedo, Plato
    • Cratylus, Plato
    • Parmenides, Plato
    • Timaeus, Plato
    • Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Hume
  5. Misc. Reading
    • Cost of Discipleship, Dietrich Bonhoeffer
    • On Certainty, Wittgenstein
    • Primer on Postmodernism, Stan Grenz
    • Eldest, Christopher Paolini

Another one (or more) bites the dust. OK, so i’m skipping Beyond Good and Evil at the recommendation of my professor/advisor. Three weeks left…

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Open Question

Over at CultureStance (link), there is a grid matrix of various Christian ideologies and how the stance on culture translates into how a group (of Christians) interact with the culture.  i would suggest that Christianity should be in the “Reclaim Culture” category.  What do you think?

HT: Len

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