The content of the belief includes a broken clock, but Joe's belief is not about broken clocks. — creativesoul
If all belief is an attitude towards some proposition — creativesoul
Yes. I made the same point many pages ago. It's remarkable how some threads can motor on needlessly fueled mostly by misunderstanding. — Janus
Not an attitude toward some proposition.
Able to be put in the form of a propositional attitude. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Yet as long as beliefs are taken to be representational, then for me “content of belief”, “what belief is about” and “what belief is referring to” (so the referent of a belief) are interchangeable expressions. Is it not the case for you? — neomac
Yep, I guess you have to have something to argue about, and if creativity fails...(willful?) misunderstanding may be resorted to, — Janus
Read the debate and see for yourself where belief was described as an attitude towards a proposition on at least one occasion. — creativesoul
could you take the time to read my first few posts in the debate and offer a critique or some other summarization? Does anything jump out as suspect? — creativesoul
I'm fairly certain that understanding how belief works is imperative, crucial even, to understanding ourselves and the world around us — creativesoul
I'm unsure of the difference between those. What do you mean? — creativesoul
Sure, but again I’m interested to understand better what kind of substantial issues your claims are supposed to address. For the same reason I asked you another question that you didn’t answer yet: how is your distinction (between what belief is about and content of belief) supposed to work when Jack, in a dream, believes that he’s talking about his dog (which he really never had) with a kid (which he never met or saw in his real life) in a place (which doesn’t resemble any places he remembers to have seen so far)?I mean what I write. Let's focus there. — creativesoul
I don’t think so, despite your claim: indeed if we stick to your other claim - “I mean what I write” - in a previous post you reported Jack’s belief as “he believes that a broken clock was working” which is a contradictory belief, while now you report his belief as “he believed that that particular clock was working” (i.e. the same way I would do) which is not contradictory. Unless you have another reason to explain the way you reported Jack's belief, I take it to mean that the second report is better then the first one, as I too believe.Evidently, we've very different standards regarding what counts as a "better report" of Jack's belief — creativesoul
Well so far it shows just your terminological preferences. What substantial issues they are supposed to clarify is another question.The broken clock shows that the content of belief is not equivalent to what belief is about. — creativesoul
Thats what you would say if i was speaking a different language. What does Arabic and Russian look like to you, compared to English? What do they sound like to you compared to English?Might have to leave it there. After all, your posts are no more than scribbles. — Banno
Truth is best understood through T-sentences: "P" is true iff P — Banno
This is confusing. You're saying the name is true iff the proposition? What does that even mean? You seem to be saying that something is true if it is simply spoken. What is the difference between mentioning and use? Is not mentioning a type of use? What is the difference between speaking about and with?"P" is the name for a proposition, P is the proposition. ""The cat is on the mat" is true iff the cat is on the mat. The first is mentioned, the second, used. The firs tis spoken about, the second, spoken with. — Banno
Then describe the beginning of how a new word is used. If we run the risk of talking past each other because we are using names differently then that seems to show that there is a mental aspect of associating a name with what it is about and THEN sharing that relationship with others. Agreement comes after use.Almost. Names are social. They work because of their use amongst a group of people, not one. Describing them as mental cannot work because it misses the collective use. — Banno
Which has been shown to not be helpful in the slightest.Not an attitude toward some proposition.
Able to be put in the form of a propositional attitude. — ZzzoneiroCosm
If the attitude is certainty, as certainty is the attitude that some belief is true, then animals certainly behave as if they are certain of what is the case is - like a wolf is nearby - sometimes better than humans as they may have better hearing or smelling than we do.Beliefs are not propositions. They are attitudes towards propositions. The belief is not "the cat is on the mat" but that "It is true that the cat is on the mat". — Banno
Which is to say that Banno doesnt know what he's talking about. Is his lack of consistency and clarity a characteristic of the propositions he makes or his attitude?Some lack of clarity and consistency in Banno's presentation too — ZzzoneiroCosm
I would like to stress that the substantial issue is if, what and how classificatory intentional abilities “guide” behavior and make it intelligible in linguistic and non-linguistic creatures. — neomac
Unless you have another reason to explain the way you reported Jack's belief, I take it to mean that the second report is better then the first one, as I too believe. — neomac
Jack looked at a broken clock because he wanted to know the time. He carefully noted the time indicated on the face of the clock by looking at the clock's hands; i.e., by already knowing how to read a clock. The clock on the wall indicated 3 o'clock. Jack - in that very moment - believed that it was three o'clock because he believed that that particular clock was working. That particular clock was broken. — creativesoul
(my bolds)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? I doubt it. — Banno
I'm afraid I cannot help you there. I'm working on an understanding of belief that is amenable to evolutionary progression based upon the tenets of methodological naturalism. — creativesoul
I'm afraid that I left the reader to draw the conclusion... — creativesoul
Therefore, he believed that a broken clock was working. — creativesoul
[...] it would take an actual human having first studied the cat's behavior to put the cat's belief into the form of a propositional attitude.* It would be weird to argue a cat can put things into the form of a propositional attitude. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Same then can be said of the cat cornered by a dog, with the cat hissing and spitting again with hairs on end and exposed teeth. — javra
in the case of a cat holding beliefs, it would take an actual human having first studied the cat's behavior to put the cat's belief into the form of a propositional attitude. — ZzzoneiroCosm
That's what I mean by an actual human putting the cat's belief into the form of a propositional attitude. You just did it. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I was however aiming at the notion that the cat expresses its propositional attitude to the dog, sometimes quite successfully - this with both being languageless creatures. — javra
It sounds weird to me. Sounds like a stretch possibly deployed to serve some philosophical agenda.
It also commits one to the view that propositions or at the very least propositional attitudes can exist in the absence of language. That sounds weird too and (in my mind) points to an agenda. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Yeah, I get it. I suppose it's just a matter of opinion whether we should call certain attitudes of languageless creatures "propositional." — ZzzoneiroCosm
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