If all belief consists of statements/propositions, then Jack has no belief for he has no statements/propositions.
If Jack has belief, then not all belief consists of statements/propositions, for Jack has no statements/propositions. — creativesoul
I say that it is clear that Jack has belief. Therefore, it is not the case that all belief content is propositional. — creativesoul
It does not follow from the fact that Jack cannot argue for his own belief that he has none. It does follow from the fact that Jack cannot justify his own belief that he does not have the means for doing so. It does follow from the fact that Jack has belief and no language that not all belief is existentially dependent upon language. It does follow from the fact that Jack has belief and no language that not all belief content is propositional/statements... — creativesoul
If you accept that the concept belief takes its meaning from public behaviours, then what of your "private beliefs"? If you are merely saying that there is some internal aspect to belief, as there is e.g. an internal aspect to pain, then I agree - although I'm not sure what pre-linguistic man's internal aspect of a belief could be without language. But also, as I've said before, I think it confuses matters to use the word private here, given its Wittgensteinian usage, i.e. where something cannot be made public or can be known only by a single individual. If you accept that the word belief gets its meaning, and that beliefs can be expressed, via external, public behaviours, then it confuses matters to refer to beliefs as private, especially when the discussion is also about Wittgenstein. — Luke
The problem as I pointed out to Banno, was that the concept belief doesn't get it's meaning from the private mental happening. — Sam26
"Jack has a belief"cannot be true if beliefs are our descriptions of Jack's behaviour, since our descriptions are not Jack's descriptions.
"Jack has a red ball" cannot be true if "red" is our descriptions of Jack's ball, since our descriptions are not Jack's descriptions. — Banno
I warn against conflating the necessary and sufficient conditions for having a red ball with a description of having a red ball. That's what's going on with your account. — creativesoul
Yeah. Except that a belief is a description. — Banno
SO what more is there to the content of a belief than subject and statement? — Banno
...what do you do with beliefs that are simply shown and not stated? We know that a belief can be stated given a linguistic context, but not all beliefs originate in linguistic contexts, i.e., they can simply be reflections of our actions, again like Wittgenstein's examples. — creativesoul
↪creativesoul "Wittgenstein didn't figure it out either," that's really funny, not that he wasn't wrong about some things, but that you would say such a thing. I don't know that I would have the audacity to say such a thing. His mind and philosophy, generally, was just on a different level altogether in terms of genius. — Sam26
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