Instigator / Con
8
1511
rating
8
debates
56.25%
won
Topic
#5770

Traditional Knowledge & Justifiable Obtainability

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
6
Better sources
4
4
Better legibility
2
2
Better conduct
2
0

After 2 votes and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...

Novice_II
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
5
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
Two months
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
None
Contender / Pro
12
1896
rating
100
debates
93.5%
won
Description

PRO's claim: All traditional knowledge is a justifiably obtainable thing or some traditional knowledge is a justifiably obtainable thing.
CON's claim: No traditional knowledge is a justifiably obtainable thing.

Stipulations:
1) All traditional knowledge is a justified true belief.
2) When mentioning knowledge without "traditional," it is assumed that "traditional knowledge" is meant.
3) Although laws of logic are not necessarily propositions, they can become propositions or claims. For example, "no existence is contradicting" is the law of contradiction (LNC), and the format given is a proposition. That is the treatment of the laws of logic within this debate.

Please see my three recent debates to understand how CON constructs their opening statement.

Criterion
Con
Tie
Pro
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

I would have probably awarded the win to Con if it weren't for Pro pointing out that their arguments are self-defeating. But Pro's position appears to be better than a self-defeating one by enough of a margin to have more convincing arguments. Their prior probability argument, for example, even though it's bad, since it was not adequately addressed.

Con stated that their argument is clearly better since it is deductive (likely insinuating that deductive arguments, if sound and valid, are much stronger than other arguments). Pro seems to have missed this insinuation, but regardless, a self-defeating deductive argument is not clearly better than a non-self-defeating inductive argument which was not properly countered.

Pro's forfeiture leads me to award Con the point for conduct.

Criterion
Con
Tie
Pro
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

Pro gives "bachelors are unmarried men" as an example of a justified true belief that is also knowledge. This is a debate-winner on its own unless sufficiently countered by Con. Unfortunately, much of Con's case only tangentially relates to this, and they never make a strong case that bachelors might not be unmarried men. Con references "rules that underlie thinking itself" but does not show how these rules are flawed or how Pro's statement about bachelors relies on them. There was a lot of back-and-forth where Con wasn't totally clear, but at the end of the debate, I'm left with an almost uncontested statement that bachelors are unmarried men and that Pro has upheld their burden. Pro doesn't have to show anything about rules that underlie thinking, just that bachelors are unmarried men, which they justify in the first round. Further weakening Con's case is that they admit parts of it haven't been proven, and that it's essentially self-defeating (it would mean I can't accept any of their premises as knowledge.)

Conduct goes to Con for Pro's forfeiture.