User:Tom Morris/Epistemic value

In epistemology, the problem of epistemic value refers to a range of arguments presented against accounts of knowledge broadly in the tradition of justified true belief-based theories. The question posed of such accounts is to ask what value is added by some belief being knowledge rather than just being a true belief.

History
Raising of the value problem has historically been attributed to Plato in §97—100 of the dialogue Meno.

Plato (in the voice of Socrates‚ proceeds to answer Meno by arguing that knowledge is more valuable as it is "fastened by the tie of the cause" (§98) of that knowledge.

Swamping problems
The epistemologist Duncan Pritchard has described the value problem as having two forms: primary and secondary. The primary value problem refers to what value knowledge has over true belief, following the sort of justified true belief model that is implicit in the Meno. But the secondary value problem also exists and poses a problem for all sorts of analyses of knowledge including those reformulated to try and cope with the challenges presented by the Gettier problem. Under an analysis of knowledge that has been tempered to deal with Gettier cases, what value does knowledge have over a justified true belief that doesn't amount to knowledge? More generally, a secondary value problem may appear when one can ask why knowledge is more valuable than a subset of the constituent parts of knowledge.

In contemporary philosophy, the value problem is linked with the swamping problem, generally attributed to Jonathan Kvanvig.