We cannot frame a belief without a language, but it doesn't follow from this that we cannot believe without a language — Janus
I would only point out here that Meta is not drawing the crucial distinction between thought, belief, and thinking about thought and belief... — creativesoul
I would only point out here that Meta is not drawing the crucial distinction between thought, belief, and thinking about thought and belief...
Same problem historically that epistemology has succumbed to...
The logical consequence is either non linguistic agents have no belief or propositions are prior to language. Neither is acceptable. — creativesoul
Thoughts and beliefs are already framed in language, and that framing doesn't require thinking about thought and belief. — Janus
Thinking and believing are not necessarily framed as thoughts and beliefs. though. Thinking about thought and belief is a still further process.
I would say you are not drawing the crucial distinctions between thinking and thoughts, and believing and beliefs.
What I am saying is that what is required to fulfill the conditions of what we understand by "belief", is thinking about thought. This is the only thing which can bring about the conviction required by what we understand as "belief". If this produces the conclusion that non linguistic agents have no belief, then you ought to accept this, instead of trying to characterize some type of thinking which does not suffice to fulfill the conditions of "belief" as belief. Calling that type of thinking "belief" is nothing but a misuse of the word. — Metaphysician Undercover
Agreed regarding some kinds of thought and belief, — creativesoul
I have been referring to thought as 'thinking' and belief as "believing". — Janus
So, in my terms a thought or a belief, being defined as a determinate entity, must be linguistically framed; whereas thought and belief, or thinkings and believings need not be so framed. — Janus
The term "thought" can refer to either a plurality of thoughts, or a single one. — creativesoul
No, your problem is that you're not interested in anyone else's thoughts and beliefs, even when they are patently more coherent than your own. — Janus
The term "thought" can refer to either a plurality of thoughts, or a single one.
— creativesoul
No, the term "thought" refers to the process of thinking; it is the noun equiavelnt to the verb "thinking, in other words. The term "a thought" refers to a single thought, and the term "some thoughts" refers to a plurality of thoughts. — Janus
By my lights — creativesoul
What I'm telling you is that in order to fulfill the criterion for your notion of "belief", one must think about one's own thought. Doing that requires complex(written) language use. Thus, according to your criterion for "belief", one cannot have belief until and unless one is already fairly affluent in language use. — creativesoul
As a matter of fact, if what you say here is true, when one first learns that that is(called) a "tree", s/he does not believe - cannot possibly believe - that that is there(whatever and wherever that may be). — creativesoul
For fuck's sake, if what you say is true, then one cannot even believe that they have things called "thought" until they've already begun thinking about their thoughts... — creativesoul
Seems to me that you've no idea what you're talking about. The notion of "belief" your working from is found lacking, wanting, and basically begging for truth. Everyday fact contradicts your notion, and yours isn't the only one...
Misuse of a term is neither determined by nor equivalent to being different from your use. I've just shown some of the issues with yours. All you've done is hand wave... Gratuitous assertions won't do Meta. It does not follow from the fact that you work from a different notion of "belief" that I am misusing the term. Take the semantic quibbling elsewhere... — creativesoul
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.