Knowledge-that, Knowledge-how, consciousness and artificial intelligence

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25206/2542-0488-2023-8-1-102-109

Keywords:

epistemology, knowledge-that, knowledge-how, skill, artificial intelligence

Abstract

The article is devoted to the discussion about the relationship between knowledge and skill. This discussion arose within the critique of dualism. It is believed that dualism presupposes an intellectualism in which knowledge-how always derived from knowledge-that. The article proposes a method of distinguishing knowledgehow
and knowledge-that through characteristic properties. This method allows us to draw a strict boundary between the two types of knowledge. This is followed by an explanation of the relationship between the two types of knowledge through the inclusion of knowledge-how as a necessary but not sufficient condition for knowledge-that. In the final part of the article, the principle of indistinguishability of knowledge-how among different agents is introduced, on the basis of which it is argued that the division into knowledge-how and knowledge-that works in the
interests of dualism, and not vice versa, as supposed by Gilbert Ryle. This division makes sense in light of the Chinese room argument and the demonstration of the
difference between humans and weak artificial intelligence.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Timofey Sergeyevich Demin, Saint Petersburg Electrotechnical University «LETI», Saint Petersburg, Russia

Assistant of Philosophical Department, Saint Petersburg Electrotechnical University «LETI» (ETU LETI), Saint Petersburg.

Konstantin Gennadyevich Frolov, HSE University, Moscow, Russia

Candidate of Philosophical Sciences, Researcher at the International Laboratory for Logic, Linguistics and Formal Philosophy, HSE University, Moscow; Researcher of Philosophy Department, ETU LETI, Saint Petersburg.

Downloads


Abstract views: 48

Published

2023-02-28

How to Cite

Demin Т. С., & Frolov К. Г. (2023). Knowledge-that, Knowledge-how, consciousness and artificial intelligence. Omsk Scientific Bulletin. Series Society. History. Modernity, 8(1), 102–109. https://doi.org/10.25206/2542-0488-2023-8-1-102-109

Issue

Section

Philosophy