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The Gettier Problem

For 2,400 years, philosophers defined knowledge as "justified true belief." In 1963, Edmund Gettier shattered this definition with a 3-page paper that remains one of the most influential in modern philosophy.

1963
Year Published
3
Pages
โˆž
Impact

๐Ÿ“š The Traditional Definition of Knowledge

J
T
B
K?

Since Plato, philosophers believed that knowledge = justified true belief:

  • Justified You have good reasons for believing it
  • True The belief corresponds to reality
  • Belief You actually hold the belief

If all three conditions are met, you have knowledge. At least, that's what everyone thought for millennia...

๐Ÿ’ฅ Gettier's Counterexamples

Gettier showed cases where someone has justified true belief, but clearly doesn't have knowledge!

๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐ŸŒพ
๐Ÿ•
๐Ÿ‘
"There's a sheep!"
โ† Hidden real sheep

The Sheep in the Field

A farmer looks at a field and sees what appears to be a sheep. She forms the belief "There is a sheep in the field."

In reality, she's looking at a dog that looks like a sheep. However, hidden behind a hill in the same field, there IS an actual sheep!

โœ“ Justified: She sees what looks like a sheep
โœ“ True: There IS a sheep in the field
โœ“ Belief: She believes there's a sheep
? Knowledge: Does she KNOW there's a sheep?
๐Ÿš—
๐Ÿ 
"That's a barn!"

Fake Barn Country

Henry drives through a region filled with elaborate barn facadesโ€” flat wooden fronts that look exactly like barns from the road.

He points at one building and says "That's a barn." By sheer luck, he happens to be pointing at the only real barn in the area!

โœ“ Justified: It looks exactly like a barn
โœ“ True: It IS a real barn
โœ“ Belief: He believes it's a barn
? Knowledge: Does he KNOW it's a barn?
๐Ÿ•
๐Ÿ‘ค
"It's 1 o'clock!"

The Stopped Clock

Sarah glances at a clock on the wall that reads 1:00 PM. She forms the belief "It is 1:00 PM."

Unknown to her, the clock stopped exactly 12 hours ago. But by coincidence, she happens to look at it at exactly 1:00 PM!

โœ“ Justified: The clock shows 1:00
โœ“ True: It IS 1:00 PM
โœ“ Belief: She believes it's 1:00
? Knowledge: Does she KNOW the time?

๐Ÿง  Test Your Intuition

Scenario 1 of 4

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๐Ÿ”ง Responses to the Gettier Problem

Philosophers have proposed many ways to "fix" the definition of knowledge:

No False Lemmas

Knowledge = JTB + "your justification doesn't rely on any false beliefs." The farmer's belief relied on the false lemma "that thing I see is a sheep."

Reliabilism

Knowledge requires that your belief was formed by a reliable process. Looking at stopped clocks isn't reliable for telling time.

Tracking Theory

You know P if: had P been false, you wouldn't believe P. Henry would still believe "barn" even if it were a facade.

Virtue Epistemology

Knowledge must arise from intellectual virtues (careful reasoning). Getting lucky isn't a virtue!

"No analysis sufficiently similar to JTB can ever avoid Gettier-style counterexamples. Any analysis of the form JTB+X will be susceptible to cases where luck undermines knowledge."
โ€” Linda Zagzebski, "The Inescapability of Gettier Problems" (1994)

๐ŸŒ Why Does This Matter?

Legal Testimony

Courts require witnesses to have "knowledge" of facts. But what if they're Gettieredโ€”right for the wrong reasons?

Scientific Discovery

If a scientist reaches a true conclusion through flawed reasoning, do they "know" it? Does it count as discovery?

AI and Knowledge

When can we say an AI system "knows" something? The Gettier problem is central to machine epistemology.

Everyday Life

We use "know" constantly. Gettier cases reveal our intuitions about knowledge are more complex than we realized.