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    False propositions cannot be facts. — Carmelics
    Home/Philosophy of Language
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    Supports→Knowledge requires truth.

    False propositions cannot be facts.

    Truth & Knowledge
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    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge

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    Knowledge requires truth.

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    Knowledge is knowledge of facts.Knowledge requires truth.Therefore, only true propositions can be known.

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    Identity with the wrong fact does not make a proposition true.87%A proposition that S does not believe cannot be a fact that S knows.85%There are false propositions85%We say propositions are true but not that they obtain, whereas we say ...85%

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    Whenever a knower (S) knows some fact (p), several conditions must obtain. A proposition that S doesn’t even believe cannot be, or express, a fact that S knows. Therefore, knowledge requires belief.[14] False propositions cannot be, or express, facts, and so cannot be known. Therefore, knowledge requires truth. Finally, S’s being correct in believing that p might merely be a matter of luck. For example, if Hal believes he has a fatal illness, not because he was told so by his doctor, but solel

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