It occurred to me after I wrote this, that a bit of Rödl might have seeped in. — Wayfarer
Yes we are essentially agreeing that there is no objective reality that makes any sense with regard to human consciousness. — philosch
If I understand what you are asking my answer would be no, there is no "correct" way, there is no truth of the matter, there would be different ways, each with more or less utility depending on the context of each. — philosch
The thesis is summed up in the last sentence:
What is important is to appreciate that the contexts ‘Necessarily . . .’ and ‘Possibly . . .’ are, like quotation and ‘is unaware that . . .’ and ‘believes that . . . referentially opaque. — Banno
If to [any] referentially opaque context of a variable we apply a quantifier, with the intention that it govern that variable from outside the referentially opaque context, then what we commonly end up with is unintended sense or nonsense . . . — Quine, 148
A rigid designator of a necessary existent can be called strongly rigid. — Naming & Necessity, 48
What's the difference between asking whether it's necessary that 9 is greater than 7 or whether it's necessary that the number of planets is greater than 7? — N&N, 48
Well, look, the number of planets might have been different from what it in fact is. It doesn't make any sense, though, to say that nine might have been different from what it in fact is. — N&N, 48
To a large extent this is a modern version of the de re/de dicto distinction — Banno
Necessary greaterness than 7 makes no sense as applied to a number x; necessity attaches only to the connection between ‛x > 7’ and the particular method . . . of specifying x. — Quine, 148
Relating this to the OP, accepting (3) rather than (4) seems to be claiming that Pat is mistaken as to her account of her own mental life. I doubt such a move can be justified. — Banno
I guess he thinks <p>. — Wayfarer
What have you decided concerning the OP? — Banno
To make a judgement is implicitly to state 'I think that <p>' or 'I believe that <p>' In this sense, judgement is itself not one perspective among many but the condition for the possibility of any perspective.
To deny that judgment is self-conscious would involve making a judgment—and thus reaffirming what you are trying to deny. This makes the self-consciousness of judgment something that cannot be opposed or rejected. — Wayfarer
Do you have the actual hard copy? — Banno
This not by way of an argument but an outline. — Banno
It might be worth taking a close look at Reference and Modality — Banno
I think it's both interesting and significant that there are things we can know a priori. Obviously not so much in such jejune cases as John's marital status. — Wayfarer
The notion that there are final answers to some central issues is in and of itself a central issue. — Arne
"Judgment is self-consciously and objectively valid." [This] locution is not meant to convey -- absurdly -- that judgment as such is valid. It describes the form of validity that belongs to a judgment. . . . And its validity is objective: the measure of its validity does not involve the subject of the judgment. — Rodl, 5
That is, putting "I think..." in front of each proposition buggers extensionality. — Banno
We can entertain a proposition without thereby accepting, believing, or assenting to it. — banno
Both the "I" and the "it" do not refer to anything in particular. — Janus
What is the logical status of a judgement or proposition apart from its being made or beleived by anyone? If anything, it would be merely content, no? — Janus
I would have thought that the force/ content distinction reinforces the role of the "first person" — Janus
I am missing something here, but what? — Banno
The [force-content] distinction is introduced as a matter of course; the student is trained not to be tricked by the act-object ambiguity. But there is an awareness that the force-content distinction and the doctrine of propositions have difficulty accommodating 1st-person thought: I ____. — Rodl, 22
What I said should be read as a general critique of some forms of phenomenological method. — Banno
In so far as Rödl is dependent on such a method his argument doesn't hold unless one is willing to insist that Pat is wrong in her account of her own mental life. Which is what Rödl appears to be insisting on in the section referred to by ↪Wayfarer. — Banno
But I disagree about redundancy. — bongo fury
If someone disagrees with this, if they perhaps insist that their thought of judging that things are so just is judging that things are so...
What are we to do? How are we to settle such an issue? Are we to say they are mistaken? Wrong? Misunderstanding the issue? — Banno
Why presume there is even some fact of the matter? — Banno
The problem of one thought and then another is a product of the view of propositions Rödl is militating against. — Paine
I think the problem of talking about what is a new 'thought' has to first pass through the issue of the first person being the one making the judgement. — Paine
rejection of the "affirming subject" — Paine
First-person thought, insofar as it is first-personal, is not objective. — Rodl, 27
The force-content distinction is a close parallel to the distinction you're trying to draw between thought1 (the act) and thought2 (the content). — Wayfarer
For Rödl, these are not separable aspects of judgment. — Wayfarer
I think the error lies in the attempt to objectify thought (although that is not Rödl's terminology or method.) But it relates to his later point from Thomas Nagel about 'thoughts we can't get outside of'. — Wayfarer
My thought of judging that things are so is a different act of the mind from my judging that they are so. The former is about my judgment, a psychic act, a mental state; the latter, in the usual case, is not; it is about something that does not involve my judgment, my mind, my psyche. It is about a mind-independent reality. — Rodl, 38, my emphases
I use "judgment" and "thought" interchangeably, following ordinary usage: "He thinks that things are so" represents him as judging, as holding true, that things are so. — Rodl, 4
The question might be asked, what of incorrect judgement? — Wayfarer
When a judgment is incorrect, it does not negate the self-conscious aspect of judgment; rather, it indicates that the grounds or reasons upon which the judgment was based were flawed or incomplete. — Wayfarer
This sounds like the anti-metaphysical movement redux. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Unless the notion is that existence/being should just mean "every possible thing that has or can ever be quantified, for all philosophers, everywhere, — Count Timothy von Icarus
"all thinkers should be uncontroversially committed to the idea that 'existence' is just 'whatever anyone can or does quantify over.'" — Count Timothy von Icarus
1975 (when the liberals and pacifists took over the western world) — Eros1982
That which can be understood is language. — Truth & Method, 442
(this is only half facetious) — Banno
But there does seem to be an issue in kicking existence out to predication in that a diverse group of thinkers from Kant to St. Thomas have rejected being as a predicate. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Should predicates not include an ontological commitment? — Count Timothy von Icarus
does Brutus have a right to be miffed over what seems to be sophistic equivocation here? — Count Timothy von Icarus