In the begin of TOK we first looked at challenge knowledge
and that we should always consider the information we are given before
accepting it as knowledge and true meaning. We used ‘toolkits’ to help us with
this as knowledge can be problematic and this is increasing due to the ‘information
explosion’ that we have now at our finger tips. We use Wok and Aok to help make
sense if the knowledge is clear, coherent and analyse the information. We also
discussed the scale of belief and justification of claims through the use of Plato’s
ladder.
We also looked at knowledge is mediated by culture,
religion, experience and genetics, we use language to help us make choices and
to learn the knowledge.
This led us to look deeper into language and we discovered
that languages must follow rules ; it must be rule governed, intended, creative
and open-minded. We then discovered the theories of meaning, in which had a
number of parts to it.
Definition theory; this looks at the definition of words can
be more difficult then it seems, with the most clear way to define things are
mathematical ones, such as ‘triangle’. When it comes to other words, things get
a bit tricky.
Denotation theory; this is the denotation theory what
distinguishes a meaningful definition from a meaningless one. However, this doesn’t
work for abstract words which do not stand for anything such as ‘freedom’ ‘wisdom’.
Image theory; this is the meaning of a word through a mental
image and what it stands for, and that you understand/know the word if you have
a appropriate concept in your mind.
We questioned that is it possible to think without language,
and that we use language to communicate and share ideas and create new ones and
reason with one another. This led us to challenge if language affects people’s
view of reality, in that we found that it does have a strong effect on how we
view and interpreter different things.
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