The notion of "further existence" is fraught. — creativesoul
This loosening would permit some properly basic belief to be existentially dependent upon language, while also having no issue accounting for those that are not.
— creativesoul
OK, so I had said that I think basic beliefs (in order to count as basic) must be pre-linguistically formed and may or may not be articulated. You seem to be saying that some basic beliefs are not pre-linguistically formed. Could you give an example of such a belief? — Janus
The notion of "further existence" is fraught.
— creativesoul
I can't see why it is fraught. All I meant by anything having "further existence" is existence beyond merely human experience or perception of the thing in question; what we might think of as some kind of independent existence in other words. So a tree has "further existence" in this sense. — Janus
That suggests that he saw an embrace of the world as happening only in an irrational context (maybe of the sort that allows a sense of sacredness?). — frank
And yet the sense of the sacred is usually found in conjunction with some form of religion and Freud was against religion, believing that it has its genesis in infantile psyches. — Janus
You and I both see the rainbow. The use of the word "rainbow" isn't determined solely by its attachment to a private sensation; it's rather that when someone senses such a presence, it is attributed to the rainbow. — Banno
So, to the question, "Is Belief in God Properly Basic?," a discussion of "basic" and "foundational" seem to put the cart before the horse if we don't know what God is. — Hanover
I suppose a direct experience might be something like the following: Standing in front of my oak tree in my back yard, as opposed to looking at the same oak tree in a picture (direct and indirect). Hearing God speak as he stands in front of you (e.g., Jesus and the disciples), or reading his words in the Bible. Although it's not always clear the way many religious people use these words. — Sam26
The answer must be in there being two sorts of basic beliefs - those that are presumed in order for an activity to occur, like keeping the bishop on its own colour in order to play chess; and those that are somehow universally basic... and "here is a hand" is one of those. — Banno
Would you agree that the distinction between a direct experience of X and an experience of X differ only insofar as direct experience of X is not mediated, whereas experience of X in general is mediated? — fdrake
I think when someone reads the bible and hears God speaking to them through it, the experience they have is not of the character of God announcing their presence through the interpretation of words; a mediated relationship; it's a borderline aesthetic sense of identity, a tacit "this is divine" that comes from immersion in the words, like a calling or a whisper of purpose. The people who have experienced this readily distinguish it from ordinary functioning of their senses, even if the divinity expresses itself in a usual sensory modality (so no necessary divine sense to have it). It's direct in the sense of finding oneself in an intimate connection with the divine while reading, not by inferring something is divine or being caused to believe that something is divine as a result of what is read. — fdrake
I would agree, but would compare direct with indirect experiences. The best way to examine these kinds of experiences is to examine context driven experiences, or how we use the words in specific cases. — Sam26
I don't know that there is an everyday use of words that maps neatly onto the distinction between direct and indirect experiences. — fdrake
I do think there are nonlinguistic basic beliefs along with linguistic basic beliefs, but this covers a lot of ground. — Sam26
...drawing a distinction between those things which are generally thought to have independent existence and those which are not.
And you still haven't addressed the more salient question as to whether you can give some examples of basic beliefs which are generated prior to, or independently of, language use. — Janus
The answer must be in there being two sorts of basic beliefs - those that are presumed in order for an activity to occur, like keeping the bishop on its own colour in order to play chess; and those that are somehow universally basic... and "here is a hand" is one of those. — Banno
I generally agree that some people, maybe most view it like you've described. I considered myself a Christian for many years until recently, and believed that many subjective experiences I had were from God. For example, that quiet whisper of God speaking - a kind of divine sense, that some would argue all of us have. I now have many problems with this kind of thinking. I don't outright dismiss it, but I'm very skeptical of most of it, even though I still have a strong spiritual belief system (e.g., my beliefs associated with NDEs). — Sam26
I'm curious as to what happened. Do you no longer hear the sounds which you had attributed to God whispering, or do you still hear the sounds but now believe that they are caused by something other than God? — Metaphysician Undercover
that nonlinguistic belief are not under consideration in the paper, nor have they been throughout the history of epistemology. — creativesoul
Correct, Plantinga never discusses basic beliefs in terms of nonlinguistic beliefs. Nonlinguistic beliefs wouldn't fall under the category of epistemology.
Hey Creative, how's it going? — Sam26
I agree with this, i.e., there is no neat way of mapping this. It's like trying to map out what pornography is, like the Supreme Court said, I know it when I see it (Justice Stewart). I know that seeing that tree in my back yard is about as basic as you can get. The problem is setting out some definition that will fit each case. I don't think that can be done. It's like trying to come up with a definition of game that will fit every use of the word. It can't be done. This is why I say that each use needs looked at on its own merits. Even the words direct and indirect have problems as you pointed out. — Sam26
Learning the names of things is as basic as basic gets if we require all belief to have propositional content. None of the three are basic beliefs, even if we rule out non linguistic ones. — creativesoul
This discussion would take us far away from the thrust of this thread. Suffice it to say that I don't believe, because I don't think there is sufficient evidence to support many of the Christian beliefs.
By the way, I never heard sounds, it was more like a feeling or intuition. — Sam26
All beliefs are existentially dependent upon and include physiological sensory perception and memory both. So, there is no stronger ground for concluding that both are irrevocable necessary elemental constituents of all belief. Thus, removing either from the other(to separate the two) is to remove both from the belief itself, and this move renders what's left utterly inadequate, insufficient, incomplete, and just not quite enough to remain a belief. — creativesoul
Something that makes me deeply suspicious of this whole endeavour of subordinating conceptual analysis to the analysis of word use is that an idea can be posited and motivated by use and insulated from its problems by claiming that the idea itself is sound — fdrake
This is not to say behavioural indicators regarding a concept are worthless for examining how it works, it's just to say that it's not the whole story - simply because the use of words does not exhaust the domain of analysable phenomena. — fdrake
There are degrees of dependence. — Metaphysician Undercover
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