And my point was that this sort of post hoc fails if I don't act on my preference. You'd have to say my acquiring the preference is what I just do, and that belief figures in my post hoc justification for the new preference I have. — Srap Tasmaner
What have we got? Turbo Pascal? Are you kidding? — Srap Tasmaner
If so, is it the connections made that are fictive, or what is connected, or both? For example, if you're nervous about your intentions, maybe your brain rummages around among your actual beliefs and preferences and so forth, finds some stuff that will pass for an explanation and serves that up as why you want to do what you want to do. — Srap Tasmaner
I tried to defend the notion that to believe something is to act as if it is true. It didn't work, because one can act in ways contrary to one's beliefs. It's a result of the lack of symmetry between beliefs and actions mentioned above - Beliefs explain but do not determine actions. — Banno
...any belief could be used to justify any action, given suitable auxiliaries.
This appears to undermine any causal link between belief and act. — Banno
but it can also be purely a physical proposition — Sum Dude
but that's not true either since on the one hand folk believe stuff that's not true, and on the other they believe stuff that's not physical - 1+1 is 2.every attitude has it's basis in physical reality — Sum Dude
All of which is serving to reinforce my intuition that belief is hollow. — Banno
A distinction needs to be drawn between belief statements and belief, — creativesoul
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