Unknowability
Philosophical idea of things impossible to know From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philosophical idea of things impossible to know From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In philosophy, unknowability is the possibility of inherently unaccessible knowledge. It addresses the epistemology of that which they cannot know. Some related concepts include the halting problem, the limits of knowledge, the unknown unknowns, and chaos theory.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2023) |
Nicholas Rescher provides the most recent focused scholarship for this area in Unknowability: An Inquiry into the Limits of Knowledge,[1] where he offered three high level categories, logical unknowability, conceptual unknowability, and in-principle unknowability.
Speculation about what is knowable and unknowable has been part of the philosophical tradition since the inception of philosophy. In particular, Baruch Spinoza's Theory of Attributes[2] argues that a human's finite mind cannot understand infinite substance; accordingly, infinite substance, as it is in itself, is in-principle unknowable to the finite mind.
Immanuel Kant brought focus to unknowability theory in his use of the noumenon concept. He postulated that, while we can know the noumenal exists, it is not itself sensible and must therefore remain unknowable.
Modern inquiry encompasses undecidable problems and questions such as the halting problem, which in their very nature cannot be possibly answered. This area of study has a long and somewhat diffuse history as the challenge arises in many areas of scholarly and practical investigations.
Rescher organizes unknowability in three major categories:
In-principle unknowability may also be due to a need for more energy and matter than is available in the universe to answer a question, or due to fundamental reasons associated with the quantum nature of matter. In the physics of special and general relativity, the light cone marks the boundary of physically knowable events.[3][4]
The halting problem – namely, the problem of determining if arbitrary computer programs will ever finish running – is a prominent example of an unknowability associated with the established mathematical field of computability theory. In 1936, Alan Turing proved that the halting problem is undecidable. This means that there is no algorithm that can take as input a program and determine whether it will halt. In 1970, Yuri Matiyasevich proved that the Diophantine problem (closely related to Hilbert's tenth problem) is also undecidable by reducing it to the halting problem.[5] This means that there is no algorithm that can take as input a Diophantine equation and always determine whether it has a solution in integers.
The undecidability of the halting problem and the Diophantine problem has a number of implications for mathematics and computer science. For example, it means that there is no general algorithm for proving that a given mathematical statement is true or false. It also means that there is no general algorithm for finding solutions to Diophantine equations.
In principle, many problems can be reduced to the halting problem. See the list of undecidable problems.
Gödel's incompleteness theorems demonstrate the implicit in-principle unknowability of methods to prove consistency and completeness of foundation mathematical systems.
There are various graduations of unknowability associated with frameworks of discussion. For example:
Treatment of knowledge has been wide and diverse. Wikipedia itself is an initiate to capture and record knowledge using contemporary technological tools. Earlier attempts to capture and record knowledge include writing deep tracts on specific topics as well as the use of encyclopedias to organize and summarize entire fields or event the entirety of human knowledge.
An associated topic that comes up frequently is that of Limits of Knowledge.
Examples of scholarly discussions involving limits of knowledge include:
Gregory Chaitin discusses unknowability in many of his works.
Popular discussion of unknowability grew with the use of the phrase There are unknown unknowns by United States Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld at a news briefing on February 12, 2002. In addition to unknown unknowns there are known unknowns and unknown knowns. These category labels appeared in discussion of identification of chemical substances.[10][11][12]
Chaos theory is a theory of dynamics that argues that, for sufficiently complex systems, even if we know initial conditions fairly well, measurement errors and computational limitations render fully correct long-term prediction impossible, hence guaranteeing ultimate unknowability of physical system behaviors.
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.