Lunch Uncertain [Review of: Floridi, Luciano (2011) The Philosophy of Information (Oxford)]

Amsciforum 2013-03-10

Summary:

The usual way to try to ground knowing according to contemporary theory of knowledge is: We know something if (1) it’s true, (2) we believe it, and (3) we believe it for the “right” reasons. Floridi proposes a better way. His grounding is based partly on probability theory, and partly on a question/answer network of verbal and behavioural interactions evolving in time. This is rather like modeling the data-exchange between a data-seeker who needs to know which button to press on a food-dispenser and a data-knower who already knows the correct number. The success criterion, hence the grounding, is whether the seeker’s probability of lunch is indeed increasing (hence uncertainty is decreasing) as a result of the interaction. Floridi also suggests that his philosophy of information casts some light on the problem of consciousness. I’m not so sure.

Link:

http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/22962/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » Amsciforum

Tags:

knowledge probability belief epistemology stevan harnad symbol.grounding times literary supplement luciano floridi information theory uncertainty

Authors:

stevanharnad

Date tagged:

03/10/2013, 12:34

Date published:

10/25/2011, 21:07