- Fri May 29, 2020 4:39 pm
#75792
Hi aheartofsunshine!
The essayist is not demonstrating that clairvoyance is not a case of knowledge; rather, the essayist is demonstrating that clairvoyance is not a reliable process for forming knowledge. So if a person says "I know the Cleveland Browns are going to win the 2021 Super Bowl because I have clairvoyance" the author would argue that the Browns winning the Super Bowl is not knowledge because the claim was formed through clairvoyance, and clairvoyance is not a reliable process for forming beliefs. Clairvoyance is the process; knowledge is the belief. Again, the author is not arguing that clairvoyance is not knowledge, he's arguing that it is not a reliable process for forming beliefs and so, therefore, it is the claims based on clairvoyance (e.g. the Browns winning the 2021 Super Bowl) which do not meet the definition of knowledge. It's a subtle distinction, but those subtle distinctions are important on this tricky test!
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey