What kind of knowledge does one have when one knows what it is like to, say, fall in love, eat vegemite(TM), be a parent, or ride a bike? This Element addresses this question by exploring the tension between two plausible theses about this form of knowledge: (i) that to possess it one must have had the corresponding experience, and (ii) that to possess it one must know an answer to the 'what it is like' question. The Element shows how the tension between these two theses helps to explain existing debates about this form of knowledge, as well as puzzling conflicts in our attitudes towards the possibility of sharing this knowledge through testimony, or other sources like literature, theories, and simulations. The author also offers a view of 'what it is like' knowledge which can resolve both the tension between (i) and (ii), and these puzzles around testimony.
When Jennifer Court began writing "I Know What it's Like" around 2011, her aim was to enlighten her children about the details of her cancer battle that began in the year 2000. The story slowly...
I had an illness and... at some point a decision to totally trust God with your life has to be made. Will you choose to believe what God's word has to say about what you are facing or will you choose...
This is a masterpiece. Thomas E. N. Frick has taken his personalities to life in the form of two brand spanking new characters unlike any other characters brought to life. Demented Prodigy and Kray-z...
When Jennifer Court began writing "I Know What it's Like" around 2011, her aim was to enlighten her children about the details of her cancer battle that began in the year 2000. The story slowly...
If God knows what sex, the strongest force in the human world, feels like, he must understand what I'm going through! "God Knows What Sex Feels Like" isn't just another book of what to do and what...