(DPC) For every event E possibly there exists a statement S( E ) such that E is the truth maker for S( E ). — fdrake
Event as in space-time region, or event as in abstract proposition about (or property of) such a region? Or something else? Or both? — bongo fury
Any event can be characterized by a statement. Whether or not it ever is, is a separate matter. — Andrew M
If a purported event were not representable in language, then we would find ourselves up against the private language argument. We would have no grounds for calling it an event. — Andrew M
After all, our conditional logical form very likely is constructed on t he foundation that pragmatically "mirrors" the primitive, non symbolic cat knowing. — Constance
So, to save it from being Banno arguing that propositional content is a property of statements (or more generally speech acts) and since belief is a propositional attitude, the content of the belief is the proposition it's directed towards, and so concluding it must be propositional content.
And you arguing that belief content is a broader semantic category - I don't know what kind of things you throw in it, other than that it can be "pre-linguistic" - and so since not all of that content is even "linguistic" (presumably not all words or symbols, I don't know where you come from on this), not all of that content can be propositional; since propositions must be linguistic.
If you continued like that, Banno could assert his definition of belief, you could assert your definition of belief, and there's a strong chance you'll both address none of the other's points and retreat to hedges — fdrake
I'd be interested in hearing your argument for how you get from:
If a purported event were not representable in language, then we would find ourselves up against the private language argument. We would have no grounds for calling it an event.
— Andrew M
To: for every event E possibly there exists a statement S(E) such that E is the truth maker for S(E). — fdrake
If the purported event is representable in language and it meets the public usage criteria for an event, then it is an event. — Andrew M
After all, our conditional logical form very likely is constructed on t he foundation that pragmatically "mirrors" the primitive, non symbolic cat knowing. — Constance
You seem to be equivocating on different senses of what it means to say that events could potentially be stated. It could be said that, at a time when there were no language users, events could not potentially be stated (because there were no language users), but it could equally be said that those events could potentially be stated (because there could potentially have been language users). The first is an expression of actual or real potential, and the second is an expression of purely logical potential. — Janus
I guess you're done here, then. — fdrake
Oh, yeah, all that. Except "The content of what is said is what it shows" - "content" is wrong, as shown in PI - use replaces content. — Banno
Oh, yeah, all that. Except "The content of what is said is what it shows" - "content" is wrong, as shown in PI - use replaces content. — Banno
...everything's sufficiently (semantically) externalised that it's functionality all the way down in terms of meaning... — fdrake
Isn't your complaint just that I do not say enough about that of which we cannot speak? — Banno
To me, that's too close to referent, to there being something that the sentence must be about, to reified meaning. — Banno
I said artworks do not show use; you say 'the use of a poem is not what it is about". Is this meant to be a disagreement? — Janus
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