Transparency (philosophy)

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In epistemology, transparency is a property of epistemic states defined as follows:

An epistemic state E is weakly transparent to a subject S if and only if when S is in state E, S can know that S is in state E;

an epistemic state E is strongly transparent to a subject S if and only if when S is in state E, S can know that S is in state E, AND when S is not in state E, S can know S is not in state E.

Pain is usually considered to be strongly transparent: when someone is in pain, he knows immediately that he is in pain, and if he is not in pain, he will know he is not.

Transparency is important in the study of self-knowledge and meta-knowledge.

References

    • Paul A. Boghossian, "The Transparency of Mental Content"; Philosophical Perspectives, Vol. 8, Logic and Language. (1994), pp. 33–50.


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