< Précis of epistemology

"- ... I'm willing to join you in examining virtue and inquiring into what it could be.

- But how will you inquire into this, Socrates, when you don't at all know what it is? For what sort of thing, from among those you don't know, will you put forward as the thing you're inquiring into? And even if you really encounter it, how will you know that this is the thing you didn't know?

- I understand the sort of thing you want to say, Meno. Do you see what an eristic argument you're introducing, that its not possible for someone to inquire either into that which he knows or into that which he doesn't know? For he wouldn't inquire into that which he knows (for he knows it, and there is no need for such a person to inquire); nor into that which he doesn't know (for he doesn't even know what he'll inquire into)." (Platon, Meno 80de, Fine 2014)


The two premises of Meno's argument are false.

We can know what we are looking for before we find it. It is obvious. This is what we do whenever the problems we are trying to solve are well identified.

We can search without knowing what we are looking for. It is less obvious. This is what we do when we search without knowing very well where we are going.

Knowing what to look for without having found it

As soon as we have a perception or detection system, we are able to know what we are looking for, before we have found it. We search by trying to detect what the system is capable of detecting. We know what we are looking for if we know what we are able to perceive. We find what we are looking for when we perceive it.

To pose a problem is to give oneself an end, a goal, an objective. We have solved the problem when we have reached the end or when we know how to reach it. We know an end when we know how to perceive or detect it if it has been reached.

Meno's argument confuses the knowledge of a problem with the knowledge of its solution. We can know an end, so we know what we are looking for, before having reached it, so we have not yet found it.

When we have to imagine what we are going to do before acting, we replace one problem with another: to imagine an action or program of actions that solves the initial problem. One can then explore by imagination the space of the possibilities of solution. We can solve many problems without leaving our chair. Of course, one needs to know how to anticipate in order to determine by imagination whether a sequence of actions is feasible and whether it achieves the goal. When the knowledge acquired beforehand is sufficient, imagination alone, without action, makes it possible to find solutions. Thanks to our imagination, the knowledge already acquired is a springboard to acquire more knowledge.

A general problem-solving method is to identify all possible solutions (all possible actions and sequences of actions, for example) and to try them until one has found which achieves the desired goal. This method is very effective as long as the number of possibilities to try is not too great. But even the most powerful supercomputers can not solve certain problems in this way because the space of possibilities they have to try is far too great.

A heuristic is a problem-solving method that explores the space of solution possibilities by selecting some which look promising (Newell & Simon 1972, Russell & Norvig 2010). Learning through exercise can be seen as a resolution of a problem based on a simple heuristic. The problem is defined by the objectives which the desired know-how must attain and by their initial conditions. The possibilities of solution are the ways of acting that one can try. We start by selecting a possibility, not too bad if possible, then we experiment with variations and evaluate their results. We modify in successive stages the initial know-how while retaining the variations which seem to bring us closer to the desired know-how. In this way we explore the space of possibilities in small steps, moving from one way of doing things to another that seems to improve it. It is a form of learning through trial, error and success.

Problem solving is like a prayer. We have a problem and we pray to find the solution. We would not find the solution if we had not prayed. Praying gives us the solution.

Searching without knowing what to look for

To look for the answer to a question, one must understand the question. How to look for the answer to the question "what is virtue?" if we do not know what virtue is?

We know what we are looking for when we are able to detect it if we have found it. But we do not have in advance detectors of virtue, reason or wisdom. To be able to recognize wisdom, we must already be wise. How can we seek wisdom if we cannot recognize it? Even if we hit upon it by chance, we would not even know we met it.

We can move forward without knowing where we are going, simply by going straight ahead. We do not know where this path leads us, we seek it, without knowing what we are looking for. We can therefore search without knowing what we are looking for.

We can be carried and guided by ideas without knowing where they lead us.

We have to be expert to recognize expert knowledge. A beginner must become an expert, and therefore acquire knowledge that he is unable to recognize. How does he do it ?

A beginner is able to solve beginner problems, to recognize the knowledge and mistakes of a beginner. This is enough to start. The ability to recognize knowledge progresses with the acquisition of knowledge. This enables us to learn to solve increasingly difficult problems. This is how one becomes an expert.    We can learn to perceive. We do not know in advance what we will be able to perceive. We do not know in advance what we will be able to find because we are not yet able to perceive it.

To learn by exercise, through trial, error and success, it is not necessary to know where we are going, we just have to want to progress.

We do not need to know in advance what we are looking for, we can learn it along the way.

We do not know ourselves. We do not know in advance what we can become. We search without knowing what we are looking for because we are looking for ourselves.

We do not know what we are capable of. The list of problems that we can solve is not known in advance.

Theoretical problems

Solving theoretical problems consists in using reasoning to increase our knowledge. A problem is theoretical when one is seeking by reasoning to answer a question. If we need to observe or experiment to find an answer, then the question is not a theoretical problem. The prior knowledge, the statement of the question and our faculties of reasoning must suffice to find the solution of a theoretical problem. If there is no reasoning to answer the question, it is because the theoretical problem is not well identified, or that its (meta)solution is to have no solution.

For a closed question, there are only two possible solutions, yes or no. For an open question, the solution must name or describe one or more beings which meet the conditions set out in the question. The beings thus named or described are then the solutions of the problem. For a theoretical problem to be solved, one must state its solutions and justify them, giving a reasoning which proves that they are truly solutions to the problem.

In order for a theoretical problem to be properly identified, it is necessary to make explicit all the conditions of the problem, including the principles with which we will reason to solve it.

In order for a theoretical problem to be properly identified, it is necessary to explain all the conditions of the problem, including the principles which will help us to reason in order to solve it.

When we know the principles of a theory, we are able to recognize the proofs founded on these principles. We thus have a system for detecting proofs and theorems. One can thus know what one is looking for, a proof of a theorem, before having found it.

The acquisition of knowledge by the solution of theoretical problems requires a prior knowledge already acquired, from which we reason. Thanks to reasoning, the theoretical knowledge already acquired is a stepping stone for acquiring more knowledge.

In general, the statement of a problem is not sufficiently explicit to be a well-identified theoretical problem. We must find ourselves the principles with which we will reason (Aristotle, Topics).

How to find the good principles? - We recognize good principles by their fruits. - How do we recognize fruit? - Reason bears fruit when it helps us to think well and live well. But we do not have the detectors of good thinking and good living in advance. We must already be wise to recognize the fruits of reason. It is not always easier to recognize the fruits than to recognize the good principles. And good principles are themselves among the fruits.

Reason bears fruit when it helps us to think well, to act well, to live well. But we are easily deluded. We can very easily believe that we think or act well for very bad reasons. Reason does not always provide definite answers because the difference between real fruits and illusions, between good wheat and tares, is not always neat and clearly marked.

The touchstones of reason

A touchstone is a hard and rough stone on which a sample of precious metal is rubbed to test its purity. The assayer identifies the metal from the trace it leaves on the stone. We are both touchstones and assayers for reason. We experience reason on ourselves and assess it from its traces on our spirits.

A beginner is not always able to recognize the fruits of reason and the good principles, because he is not yet a very good assayer of reason, he must learn it, but he is nevertheless a beginner assayer, able to recognize the fruits and the good principles accessible to the beginner. He becomes aware of good principles when they make him progress, when they make him more competent. Good principles must make people competent. If they do not make them competent, they are not good principles. Reason must be good for everyone, otherwise she would not be reason.

I am the source, the middle and the end of reason, the source because reason is born from my thoughts, the middle because she develops in me when I seek her, the end because she is accomplishing herself when I am accomplishing myself.

I am for myself a fundamental criterion of recognition of good knowledge, since I recognize it by recognizing my competence.

Reality, life and thoughts continually try thoughts. Thought cannot develop without criticizing itself, because it has to adapt to reality, including the reality that it is itself. A spirit does not know in advance what is good for herself. She learns it through experience and criticism.

Each spirit is for herself as for all the others a criterion of recognition of reason, because reason is necessarily what is good for all spirits.

True knowledge can always be shared. It makes me competent because it can make all spirits competent. If I acquire knowledge without knowing how to explain it, and how to give proof acceptable to all spirits, it is because I did not understand it well. To master knowledge, one must be able to teach it clearly to all those who want to acquire it.

We justify our knowledge by proofs based on principles. But the principles must themselves be justified. They have to prove themselves by helping us develop good knowledge. Everyone can use his own experience to put principles to the test and learn to recognize their value. But one must not limit oneself to one's own experience. When one takes a principle as the basis of a reasoning, one implicitly asserts that it has a universal value, that it can serve all those who want to reason. A principle must therefore be put to the test of all the experiences of all human beings. A principle proves itself by helping all spirits develop good knowledge.

Lonely thinking is naturally self-critical, as long as it does not deny reality. But the development of reason is above all a collective work (Leibniz 1688-1690, Goldman 1999), in which each human being can participate as soon as he wants, that he knows that he is capable of it and that he voluntarily submist to its discipline: justification and critical evaluation.

In order to evaluate our proofs we must voluntarily submit them to the criticism of all human being. Objections and attempts at refutation may lead us to modify our reasoning, and sometimes even to abandon it, if refutation is decisive. We develop knowledge by preserving the principles and the proofs which resist the critical tests and renouncing the others.

All the development of knowledge can be conceived as the resolution of a single and vast problem. The objective is a knowledge which satisfies our desire to think well and live well. We explore the space of possibilities whenever we examine knowledge in order to evaluate it. Critical tests are designed to select promising opportunities. Criticism is therefore a heuristic that helps us to solve the problem of the development of reason (Goodman 1955, Rawls 1971, Depaul 2006). But we seek without knowing what we are looking for, because we do not always know in advance how to recognize reason.

The discovery of reason

Practical reason gives us the knowledge and the thoughts to act well and to live well. Theoretical reason gives us the knowledge and the thoughts to think well and develop a good knowledge. Practical reason requires us to develop theoretical reason, because we need to think well to live well.

That the spirit must live for the good of the spirit is not only a principle of practical reason, it is also a principle of theoretical reason. To think well we must always think to enjoy the benefits of all thoughts. Good knowledge is always a knowledge that invites us to welcome all good knowledge. Good knowledge is never closed on itself and it is always a knowledge that makes it possible to acquire more knowledge.

We do not know in advance the scope of our ability to solve problems. We discover it through exercise. By solving problems, we become more aware of our abilities. The better we know them, the more we can extend their field of application. We thus discover ourselves as rational beings, that is, capable of developing reason. All the developments of reason are discoveries, because we do not know what reason will reveal to us before we get to work. We discover that we are able to invent or reveal reason.

To know that reason exists, we need to make it exist, by sharing it among us. In this sense, we do it. It would not be here if we did not work to make it live among us. But the belief that reason is only our invention is wrong, because we do not decide what it is, we can not make that it is what it is not, or that it is not what it is. When we work we discover it. Everything happens as if reason had always been there forever, and we are the last to learn it.

To develop reason, we must learn to reason and therefore to invent discourses and theories, but we must also learn to listen. We do not know in advance what reason will teach us, we discover it by listening and opening our eyes, being ready to welcome all observations, thoughts and principles that could enlighten us, help us to think better and live better.

The conditions for the appearance of reason are general: beings who speak and who want to find together truths and proofs, respecting all the rules of critical thinking. These conditions do not depend specifically on our humanity on Earth. Other living beings, on other planets, in other times, could also develop the same reason, because her conditions of appearance are universal.

The unity of reason

For knowledge to be shared, it must draw only on common resources, accessible to all. One might think that it is a very restrictive limit, that by depriving oneself of private resources, one also deprives oneself of the best of knowledge, but the exact opposite is true. Our intelligences are the most powerful just when they are limited to common resources. It is by helping each other that we discover best the power of our intelligences, that we develop the best knowledge and that we make reason live.

A spirit is fulfilled by being good for all spirits. But is it really possible? Can a spirit really afford to be good for all spirits? Is it not rather an illusion?

Logical principles show us that we can reason correctly, epistemological principles, that we can make the difference between knowledge and ignorance, metaphysical principles, that we can know the greatest truths, ethical principles, that we can know what we must do. These great principles reveal to us the power of reason. They are universal. They give all minds the means to acquire all knowledge, to understand all minds and to reveal to them the benefits of reason. By learning what the great principles teach us, we learn at the same time that we can think for all minds. To be good for all spirits is not an inaccessible ideal. This is the reality of rational thought.

All knowledge manifests the unity of reason. The most fundamental principles, the principles of principles, are the same for all sciences. From this point of view it can be said that all sciences speak with one voice and that all spirits contribute to the development of a common knowledge.

The authority of reason

One can reason about reason as if she were the wisdom of a spirit and attribute to her a will because one can attribute to her ends. Ethics teaches us what deserves to be pursued and thus gives us the means to fulfill ourselves. That we pursue the ends that reason prescribes for us may rightly be considered as an end of reason. Everything happens as if reason was a good authority that shows us the right paths.

Knowing that a spirit must work for the good of the spirit is not enough to decide the particular ends we give ourselves. This is expected of a good authority. If it deprived us of our freedom, it would not be a good authority. Rational ethical knowledge is not a totalitarian enterprise that decides for us what we need to do. It is the exact opposite since it asks us to decide freely and intelligently. It is a condition of true freedom, because one makes a bad use of one's freedom if one does not use it for the good. The more we know the good, the better we can do it and live like a really free spirit.

What can we hope?

Reason makes us capable, but of what? What can we achieve with the skills we develop rationally? What can we hope?

If the list of problems that we can solve rationally was known in advance, we would know what to hope. But precisely, it is not known in advance. We do not know the range of skills that reason can give us.

As we do not know what reason makes us capable of, we can place our hopes very high, that the kingdom of reason come, that its will be done in earth, as it is in heaven, that the ephemeral present be the splendor of eternal truth, or very low, reason will never be more than a poor consolation in a valley of tears.

The development of reason is the story of a perpetually renewed astonishment. The sciences have exceeded our expectations. Nature has revealed many more secrets than we could dream.

To know what reason makes us capable of, the best way, and the only way, is to try. If we do not try we have no chance to see what works.


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