Do you find the account I set out in the first three posts of the debate to be a complete one? — creativesoul
On my view, all concepts are linguistic constructs, whereas not all beliefs are. All concepts are existentially dependent upon language. — creativesoul
What is the difference between knowledge and belief?What kind if attitudes?
— Harry Hindu
The attitude that the proposition is true. That's been on the boards since day one.
True, not certain. — Banno
True is a type of proposition, as opposed to false propositions. Certain would be a type of attitude of some proposition.I think I've mentioned this before. That's as good as it gets for truth. "how one determines some proposition is true" depends on the proposition; something else I've said many times. It's absurd to suppose that there could be one way to determine if a proposition is true.
You seem to have changed topics. — Banno
Banno is excellent at engaging others
— creativesoul
My attitude toward this proposition: :rofl:
— Harry Hindu
And yet here you are. — Banno
Propositions are composed of the structured sensations of visual scribbles and sounds, or touch (braille). Humans first started with using sounds to create propositions, then visual scribbles, and eventually braille for the blind. Since different sensations can be co-opted to create propositions with, why can't any animal that has sensations form propositions, like this smell means that wolves are in the area and that sound means that they are to my left, which also means I should run to my right? The only difference would be the degree of complexity with which some proposition could be made and the state-of-affairs that it can refer to.How can a language less creature, say a prehistoric mammal, have an attitude towards a proposition when propositions themselves are language constructs? The failure of what you argue is shown in it's inherent inability to make much sense of such language less belief.
— creativesoul
Again?
So a belief is a something stored in the mind of a Diprotodon? — Banno
I disagree. The referent of the word "belief" is a cognitive intentional state/event (depending on the dispositional or actual meaning we attribute to the word "belief").What is the referent of the belief in "the cat believes the bowl is empty"? — Banno
The question makes no sense on my view. — creativesoul
Beliefs are complex things composed of other things. They are a result of cognitive processes. All belief consists of correlations drawn between directly and/or indirectly perceptible things. — creativesoul
On my view, all concepts are linguistic constructs, whereas not all beliefs are. All concepts are existentially dependent upon language.
— creativesoul
On what grounds do you believe that all concepts are linguistic constructs? What are the features you ascribe to concepts that essentially require language? — neomac
Dennet has at least one intuition pump that does much the same thing in "Quining Qualia", except he's arguing against the notion of private sensations or some such and using something like the private language argument to make the point of how socially constructed the notions actually are.
I highly recommend reading that to anyone who has not. — creativesoul
What is the difference between knowledge and belief? — Harry Hindu
Yep. Believing that P is false is just believing ~P.Is it also possible to have an attitude that some proposition is false that is also a belief? — Harry Hindu
Your use of "dependent" is misleading. Implication is not dependency. Support for Creative's contention that Banno is good an engaging others is found in the fact that you continue to be engaged.It seems to me that you are implying that P1 is true depending on if P3 true — Harry Hindu
Propositions are composed of the structured sensations of visual scribbles and sounds, or touch (braille). — Harry Hindu
What is the referent of the belief in "the cat believes the bowl is empty"? — Banno
The question makes no sense on my view.
— creativesoul
I disagree. The referent of the word "belief" is a cognitive intentional state/event (depending on the dispositional or actual meaning we attribute to the word "belief"). — neomac
My impression is that here you are confusing the content of the belief, with the belief. I think your formulation would sound better if you stated "All belief consists of drawing correlations" instead of "All belief consists of correlations drawn". Yet I wouldn't find it satisfactory: we draw correlations even when we imagine or associate ideas, but imagination is not belief. — neomac
Besides what is "correlations drawn between directly and/or indirectly perceptible things" supposed to mean when one believes that 3 + 2 = 5 or God is omniscient? — neomac
creativesoul must think something like this, to explain why he is perplexed that a cat might have a belief while not being able to use language. For him, if a belief is an attitude towards a proposition, there must be propositions in minds, and so language. — Banno
Does the beetle in the box argument affirm that my honestly saying “I am in pain” has a relevant referent? Such that, though you might not instantly discern what it is, it is nevertheless that which I intend to refer to via the sigh of “my pain”. Last I read it affirms the opposite, that whether or not there is a referent to this phrase is irrelevant. Meaning being strictly attached to the abstractions of language rather than to intents, which are intrinsic. — javra
If I claim that I am referring to something intrinsic by saying that I am in pain, what I mean is that there is a simple and direct relation between my words and a sensation. Wittgenstein argues that such an isolated association between word and thing doesn’t say anything at all, it is meaningless. In order for the expression ‘ I am in pain’ to mean something to others,, it has to
refer to a socially shared context of background presuppositions, and do something new with them that is recognizable to other speakers. If I am alone, and I think to myself ‘I am in pain’, then the thought is only meaningful to me if it refers to my own network of background presuppositions and carries them forward into a new context of sense. — Joshs
If I say of myself that it is only from my own case that I know what the word "pain" means - must I not say the same of other people too? And how can I generalize the one case so irresponsibly?
Now someone tells me that he knows what pain is only from his own case! --Suppose everyone had a box with something in it: we call it a "beetle". No one can look into anyone else's box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle. --Here it would be quite possible for everyone to have something different in his box. One might even imagine such a thing constantly changing. --But suppose the word "beetle" had a use in these people's language? --If so it would not be used as the name of a thing. The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something: for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is.
That is to say: if we construe the grammar of the expression of sensation on the model of 'object and designation' the object drops out of consideration as irrelevant. — Philosophical Investigations, Sec. 293 by L. Wittgenstein
Note he asked the referent of the belief, not the word "belief". Beliefs do not have referents for they are not used to pick something out to the exclusion of all else. That's what names do. — creativesoul
Indeed, we do draw correlations when imagining, remembering, creating, envisioning, dreaming, etc. I fail to see how that presents any issue for the position I'm putting forth here. I mean, I've not claimed that all correlations are belief, nor would I. — creativesoul
Are those meaningful marks imperceptible? When one believes that 3 + 2 = 5, they've done nothing more than accept the rules of arithmetic. It may be worth noting here that numbers are nothing more than the names of quantities. When one believes that God is omniscient, they've done nothing more than learn to use language to talk about the supernatural beliefs of the community, and believe that what they are saying is true. Believing that God is omniscient is to believe that there is a God, such that God exists, and that God knows everything. — creativesoul
Name some things that you count as a concept, and it will help this along better. — creativesoul
I do not use the notion, finding different ways of talking to be more practical. — creativesoul
I do. Who doesn’t?The concept of belief and belief...
Do you draw a distinction? — creativesoul
Propositions are composed of the structured sensations of visual scribbles and sounds, or touch (braille).
— Harry Hindu
No, they re not They are composed of predicates and subjects. — Banno
Yet names are part of the belief. If your beliefs don't refer to anything in the world, then your beliefs aren't useful to anyone else. A false belief and a belief without a reference are one and the same. There is a difference between some proposition being understandable and being useful. We can put words together in such a way that follows the rules of some language, but if it doesn't agree with the facts, or state what is the case, then it is useless. Take for instance, "Joe Biden is the first president of the United States." The proposition follows the rules of English, but doesn't agree with the facts. So in what way is the proposition useful?Beliefs do not have referents for they are not used to pick something out to the exclusion of all else. That's what names do. — creativesoul
Right, so "P" is the proposition, and P is what the proposition points to. If what "P" points to is not the case, then "P" is false. If P is the case, then "P" is true.Truth is best understood through T-sentences: "P" is true iff P — Banno
Then both beliefs and knowledge can be acted on. The only difference is that knowledge is justified. But then what attitude does one have of some proposition that is true if not justification, which leads to certainty given more justification (successful uses)? Seems to me that one needs a reason to believe in anything. The amount of reasons is what is the difference between beliefs and knowledge.Belief is a relation between an actor and a statement, such that the actor takes the statement to be true.
Knowledge might variously be understood as a justified true belief or a capacity to perform some action. — Banno
The question is asked, “Does conscious awareness occur in myself, in humans at large, in other lifeforms?” To which Witt replies, “It would be a beetle in a box, so who knows and who cares? It’s irrelevant.”
As always before, I, personally, am not satisfied by Wittgenstein's answer to this and like issues — javra
Phenomenologists like Husserl doesn’t think such questions are irrelevant , but his method of answering of them I think has much in common with Wittgenstein’s. That is, consciousness would not be an object but a relational, synthetic activity organized by pragmatic use. — Joshs
Note that the most primordial beetle of all beetles, so to speak, is conscious awareness itself. The question is asked, “Does conscious awareness occur in myself, in humans at large, in other lifeforms?” To which Witt replies, “It would be a beetle in a box, so who knows and who cares? It’s irrelevant.” — javra
If I say of myself that it is only from my own case that I know what the word "pain" means - must I not say the same of other people too? And how can I generalize the one case so irresponsibly?
Now someone tells me that he knows what pain is only from his own case! --Suppose everyone had a box with something in it: we call it a "beetle". No one can look into anyone else's box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle. --Here it would be quite possible for everyone to have something different in his box. One might even imagine such a thing constantly changing. --But suppose the word "beetle" had a use in these people's language? --If so it would not be used as the name of a thing. The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something: for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is.
That is to say: if we construe the grammar of the expression of sensation on the model of 'object and designation' the object drops out of consideration as irrelevant. — Philosophical Investigations, Sec. 293 by L. Wittgenstein
That doesn’t sound a correct report of Jack’s belief. Indeed it would make Jack’s belief contradictory. A better report would be: Jack believes that clock is working. But that belief is false.he believes that a broken clock was working — creativesoul
If it needs saying, I of course reject the notion that consciousness is an entity rather than a process. Either way, however, it remains a beetle in a box in terms of Witt’s philosophy. — javra
The names are mental things that refer to things that are not names, and not mental. — Harry Hindu
If you're saying "P" and P are the same thing, as in both are propositions... — Harry Hindu
Which are composed of scribbles and sounds. — Harry Hindu
Phenomenologists like Husserl doesn’t think such questions are irrelevant — Joshs
How can a language less creature, say a prehistoric mammal, have an attitude towards a proposition when propositions themselves are language constructs? — creativesoul
If I were to say that I am choosing to use the term "belief" only for those things that can be put into the form of propositional attitudes, would you object? — Banno
My contention is that the content of beliefs are propositional. — Banno
If I were to say that I am choosing to use the term "belief" only for those things that can be put into the form of propositional attitudes, would you object? — Banno
he believes that a broken clock was working
— creativesoul
That doesn’t sound a correct report of Jack’s belief. Indeed it would make Jack’s belief contradictory. A better report would be: Jack believes that clock is working. But that belief is false. — neomac
Anyway what you mean...
How can a language less creature, say a prehistoric mammal, have an attitude towards a proposition when propositions themselves are language constructs?
— creativesoul
Banno isn't saying a languageless creature can have an attitude toward a proposition. He's saying that the languageless beliefs of languageless creatures can be put in the form of a propositional attitude.
Non-controversial.
If I were to say that I am choosing to use the term "belief" only for those things that can be put into the form of propositional attitudes, would you object?
— Banno — ZzzoneiroCosm
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