Litcius/Paper detail

Knowledge by Acquaintance and Knowledge by Description

Russell Bertr

202521 citationsDOI

Abstract

The object of the following paper is to consider what it is that we know in cases where we know propositions about ‘the so-and-so’ without knowing who or what the so-and-so is. For example, I know that the candidate who gets most votes will be elected, though I do not know who is the candidate who will get most votes. The problem I wish to consider is: What do we know in these cases, where the subject is merely described? I have considered this problem elsewhere 1 from a purely logical point of view; but in what follows I wish to consider the question in relation to theory of knowledge as well as in relation to logic, and in view of the above-mentioned logical discussions, I shall in this paper make the logical portion as brief as possible.

Topics & Concepts

EpistemologyPsychologyKnowledge managementComputer scienceCognitive sciencePhilosophySemantic Web and Ontologies