Is all knowledge dependent on culture? how to define knowledge to our own perspective? if we don't exist does the knowledge disappear?
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2Is there any chance you could share a little more of the context and motivation behind the question here? What have you been reading that's made this an interesting or important question in your study of philosophy?– Joseph Weissman ♦Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 15:54
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2It seems pretty clear that lots of knowledge isn't dependent on culture (eg: how tall a particular tree is - although different words are used, it's the same height no matter what).– James KingsberyCommented Feb 19, 2016 at 22:18
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1Depends on the philosopher, but an interesting reading could be Foucault, who argues how knowledge was structured differently throughout european history because of cultural developments in The Order of Things.– Philip Klöcking ♦Commented Feb 20, 2016 at 20:22
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How we quantify and categorize things is subject to interpretation. The Scientific method was crafted in the western world and stemmed from centuries of trial and error. but Set in stone arguments are seldom lasting. "Knowledge" is a culture. For much of the last few thousand years, Knowledge, literacy and academic capacities were maintained by aristocracy, the clergy or select few. When Gutenberg invented his printing press in 1440 he turned knowledge into mass production.– LazyReaderCommented Aug 31, 2020 at 6:48
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For interest: philosophy.stackexchange.com/q/67961/33787– christo183Commented Aug 31, 2020 at 8:03
4 Answers
how to define knowledge to our own perspective?
A good start for a working definition: A person knows that a certain fact holds, if
- he believes that the fact happens
- he can argue why he believes that the fact happens
- and his belief is correct.
Is all knowledge dependent on culture?
In general, scientific knowledge does not depend on a certain culture. Any international conference of scientists collects people from all nations and cultures. And they argue and decide independently from their culture.
if we don't exist does the knowledge disappear?
The facts continue, but the knowledge in our mind disappears.
On the opposite, much knowledge has been written down in books or journals. As soon as nobody is more able to read and understand those texts, one can discuss whether this knowledge has disappeared too.
If you are a strict dualist or an outright idealist, the answer to the last question is 'no', the ideal forms like the ideas in mathematics and logic remain, independent of material reality, and even if all intelligent species went extinct, so there were no thinkers in the world, the idea of a thinker has been established and would always exist. In fact since it ever happened, it was possible, and so it always existed even before there were any thinkers...
The answer to the first question, then, also has to be 'no'. From an idealist point of view there are underlying forms for perfect concepts, even if we will never meet one that has not been compromised by the interference of a culture.
Of course, there is a strong trend away from idealism in modern thought, because we keep finding our investment in material reality pays off in ways we did not expect. And that makes the concept of a realm separate from it seem less and less worthwhile or logical.
I tend to favor the compromise form of pantheism, a la Hegel, which suggests that intelligence is part of the structure of the world in such a way that if all thinking beings were eradicated other thinking beings would arise. That position is neither idealist, nor anti-idealist, but is largely opposed to 'substance' dualism. It presupposes that information is an aspect of material reality and that complex enough matter will always develop intelligence, because of the nature of time and resources. You can look at that inclination as an extension of Darwinism, or an assertion that intelligence is more basic than matter. The difference is largely without meaning.
In that framing, your answer is ambiguous. The knowledge may be gone, but any truly important part of it will return whenever it is lost. So it is lost? And if any important idea returns constantly in various forms, there is surely something behind the various forms making them versions of the same thing. But that 'something' can never be expressed or embodied except through being incorporated into beings with a culture. So it exists through cultures and across cultures, but is never observed independent of a culture.
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If you are an idealist, then the existence of knowledge becomes a tautology of sorts: Knowledge = Existence. I think the truly interesting case here is the dualist case. But then you would have to define "If we disappear" more precisely: I would assume my disappearing to mean total annihilation, including the annihilation of whatever otherworldly mental substances I might have. Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 19:02
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Except those are, for an idealist like Plato, or at least for NeoPlatonists like Augustine, outside of time and incapable of being destroyed. It helps not to assume the impossible... I also gave an actual answer, since I hate 'if I were something I am not' answers.– user9166Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 19:15
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I like your inclusion of Hegel, but how does that fit with the first part of the OP? Could a Hegelian hold that some knowledge is still objective, or would a Hegelian necessarily subscribe to the notion that all is language/culture dependent? Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 19:27
if we don't exist does the knowledge disappear?
Yes. Knowledge is a subjective concept, and so without subjects to do the "knowing", there is no knowledge.
Is all knowledge dependent on culture? how to define knowledge to our own perspective?
Most educated "laymen" would put forward the intuitive argument that empirical facts are objective and therefore culture/subject independent, and value and ethical statements are subjective and dependent on cultural background.
Consider however the Pirahã, who don't have concepts of cardinal and ordinal numbers, and who, because of their language, might not be capable of numeracy at all. For someone from the Pirahã people, a lot of seemingly empirical and objective facts to someone from another culture might appear completely different.
This extreme case illustrates the Quine-Duhem thesis, that all observations are ultimately theory laden, including those we think are indisputably objective. Although the idea that everything is theory laden was developed mainly within the context of the underdetermination of scientific theories, one could easily extend the principle to show that knowledge in general is always language and theory dependent, and therefore culture dependent.
Derrida offers a similar idea, but using a different approach, with his concepts of différance and deconstruction. Roughly speaking, Derrida establishes that terms in a language have meaning only relative to other terms, they never have inherent meaning. Again it is straightforward to extend this to the context of culture: Knowledge is based on meaning, and meaning is relative and therefore culture dependent, and so the same applies to knowledge.
Some in the scientific community have taken issue with this, feeling that the whole "Knowledge is culture dependent/everything is a social construct" idea has been taken too far by various thinkers and philosophers. Things came to a head with Alan Sokal's publication of a parody paper mocking such viewpoints, in what became know as the Sokal Affair.
Is all knowledge dependent on culture?
Not all knowledge. But certain type of knowledge depends on culture also. Sometimes your culture doesn't motivate you even to acquire certain types knowledge. Eg. Spiritual knowledge varies if your culture is different. You would sometimes misunderstand many things if your culture is different. If you consider "your 'beingness or existence'" also as knowledge, that knowledge wouldn't depend on culture.
how to define knowledge to our own perspective?
Since the meaning given in most dictionaries includes almost all aspects of knowledge it would be useless if we define it in another way.
if we don't exist does the knowledge disappear?
Even while living, our knowledge disappears from our brain due to many reasons. On the contrary, many knowledge of our ancestors is still with us in many forms. Though things are like this, what relativity theory explains is true (that we could see the past if we could travel faster than light), knowledge also wouldn't disappear.