Practice Flashcards
Knowledge and power — the main claim?
Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.
All Flashcards in Topic 3.3
Below are all 32 flashcards for this topic. Sign up free to track your progress and get personalized review schedules.
3.3.18 cards
Knowledge and power — the main claim?
Whoever controls what counts as knowledge holds power over those who learn it; knowledge is never just neutral facts.
Foucault's 'power/knowledge'?
Power and knowledge produce each other — whoever has power shapes what counts as knowledge, and knowledge hands power back.
Plato on who should have knowledge?
Only the wise guardians truly grasp what is good, so only they should hold real knowledge and rule.
Plato's guardians?
His trained ruling class who alone truly grasp what is good — so Plato trusts knowledge (and rule) to the few.
Freire: education as liberation?
Real education frees people to question and change their world, not 'banking' facts into passive students.
The 'banking' model of education?
Freire's name for teaching that just deposits facts into passive students — the opposite of liberating education.
Why isn't education ever fully neutral?
Any education teaches SOME view of the world, so it always carries power — the question is whose.
Plato vs Freire in one line?
Guard knowledge with a wise few (Plato) vs share it to free the many (Freire) — with Foucault showing why the choice is about power.
3.3.28 cards
Access to knowledge — the central question?
Who should control knowledge, and how should it be shared — should any of it ever be kept back?
Censorship?
Deciding what people are not allowed to know, read or say.
The case FOR some control of knowledge?
Some knowledge can cause real harm (e.g. weapons), and lies or propaganda can spread and hurt people.
The strongest worry about censorship?
Whoever censors decides what everyone else may know, and the 'harmful' label is easily abused to silence critics.
What does Article 27 say?
Everyone has the right to share in scientific advancement and its benefits and to take part in cultural life.
Knowledge as a human right vs a favour?
A right is something you're owed as a human being; a favour is granted by the powerful. Article 27 makes access a right.
How can knowledge be denied without a ban?
Paywalls, patents and expensive schooling price people out, denying access as surely as an outright ban.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights?
The UN's 1948 global list of basic human rights; Article 27 covers sharing in knowledge and its benefits.
3.3.38 cards
Whose ways of knowing count — the question?
Which methods of knowing get accepted as 'real', and which (meditation, introspection, oral tradition) get dismissed.
Ways of knowing often dismissed?
Meditation, introspection, and oral/indigenous traditions — waved away for not looking like written, experimental science.
Introspection?
Carefully looking inward at your own experience — often dismissed as 'just subjective', yet it's how we know our own minds.
Why isn't dismissing these ways neutral?
Drawing the line around 'real knowledge' is itself a choice about whose methods get to count.
Epistemic injustice (Fricker)?
Being wronged specifically as a knower — dismissed because of who you are (accent, gender, tradition), not because you're wrong.
Fricker's two forms of the harm?
Not being believed when you should be, and a group lacking the very words to name their own experience.
'Not like our science' vs 'false'?
Being different from written, experimental science isn't the same as being false — much we accept was never lab-tested.
The fair objection to these ways?
Some can't be tested or repeated the way science can, so when people disagree there's no clear way to settle it.
3.3.48 cards
Knowledge and technology — the key question?
Technology spreads knowledge, but does it tend to NARROW or WIDEN inequalities in access to it?
How can technology NARROW the knowledge gap?
Cheap devices carry the same encyclopedias, courses and lectures to billions at almost no cost.
How can technology WIDEN the knowledge gap?
No device, signal or money shuts people out (the digital divide), and paywalls and algorithms controlled by the powerful decide what you see.
The digital divide?
The gap between those with and without technology access — a device and signal you can afford, not just the internet existing somewhere.
How does technology relate to Foucault?
It's the newest form of power/knowledge — whoever owns the platform shapes what counts as knowledge for its users.
Does the gadget decide whether the gap narrows?
No — who controls the technology, and on what terms, decides; access, not the device, is what matters.
The topic's arc in one line?
Knowledge & power → access → whose ways of knowing count → technology as the engine that can narrow or widen the gap.
What lifts a Section B answer to the top band?
Arguing a claim, testing it against the strongest objection, weighing them, and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing.
Topic 3.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Application of knowledge
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
Want smart review reminders?
Sign up free to track your progress. Our spaced repetition algorithm will tell you exactly which cards to review and when.
Start Free