whar67;53927 said:
I am equally dumb-founded as the use of belief and knowledge is inline with my arguements and has been that way for centuries of philosophy.
The part you seem hung up on is a belief must contain some element of uncertainty. This is patently false.
There is a field of philosophical study called Epistemology. It deals with the definition of Knowledge. The reason I keep coming back to this is the belief 'God exists' once justified by God walking into the room the belief becomes knowledge.
In the previous example the theist starts by saying 'God exists'. Then meets God. Now he has knowledge of God existences. He still belioeves God exists but now it is knowledge.
Lets examine a conversation this theist has with his friend if your definition and logical model were true.
Theist : Hey, I met God yesterday!
Friend : You're crazy!
Theist : No really he walked into my apartment and said 'Howdy'
Friend : So I guess you believe in God then?
Theist : No
While you do not seem to want to discuss it but you need to come to grips with what knowledge is. In this case the theist knows God exists. The difference is knowledge are beliefs that are 'true'. (The definition of that is a whole other philosophical debate.)
Finally even using your #4 defintion an experience is a past event which does not exist in the mind like a belief. You have memories of your experiences. From these memories and experiences you can learn. Learning is the gaining of knowledge. Knowledge is a belief that is true.
It does include some element of uncertainty or it wouldn't be a belief. You appear to be hung up on that
that is patently false.
1. Mental acceptance of a claim as truth.
2. (countable) Something believed.
The ancient people have a belief in many deities.
3. (uncountable) The quality or state of believing.
My belief that it will rain tomorrow is strong.
4. (uncountable) Religious faith.
She often said it was her belief that carried her through the hard times.
5. (in plural) One's religious or moral convictions.
I can't do that. It's against my beliefs.
In every definition I look at, nowhere does it say that belief has a definition of definity. That defeats the entire purpose of 'belief' in the first place. That is the whole concept of belief. People can believe in their beliefs with certaintly in the sense they do not doubt what they believe. But that does not mean that which they believe to be true is definitively true.
And the theist, if he were intelligent enough, would have replied, "I always believed in god and believed god existed, now I know god does.". The reason the friend would ask, "So I guess now you believe in god then?" is because the friend is on the otherside of not even having a belief in god. If the friend asked, "So I guess now you know god exists?" would imply the friend also had a pre-existing belief in god.
Some of the best philosophers are still debating what constitutes 'knowledge'. So for you to tell me I have not come to grips with what knowledge is preposterous. Unless you are trying to tell me you have out thought the best?
A theist does not KNOW god exists, they believe god exists.
If knowledge is a belief that is true, then it is no longer a belief, but knowledge(whatever knowledge may be). A belief is only a belief when its truth or falsity cannot be proven, but is accepted as true.