J
entailment are 'logical rules', which could only be said to 'cause'(scarequotes intentional) someone to infer certain conclusions, if they know and follow the rules. — creativesoul
entailment are 'logical rules', which could only be said to 'cause'(scarequotes intentional) someone to infer certain conclusions, if they know and follow the rules.
— creativesoul
Sure. "Knowing the rules" is a background condition, just like "all things being equal at room temperature and normal gravity etc." is a background condition for many statements of physical causation. My questions was/is, Given that the mind in question does know the rules, do they actually have a choice about following them? — J
↪creativesoul I'd like to understand this thought better. I think you're saying that I can have a belief without also having a propositional expression or equivalent of that belief? Thus, a non-linguistic animal can form a belief about, say, pain and fire, without entertaining any propositions about it? — J
If I've got that right, I don't think it's tangential at all. It raises the extremely interesting question of what to do with beliefs, in the taxonomy of Worlds 2 and 3. If we're going to use causal language, as I'm suggesting we might do, what causes a bear to believe that fire will cause pain, and how does that belief in turn cause whatever mental process results in the bear's steering clear of smoke? Is all this happening in the world of psychological events, local to the bear, and explainable in terms of brain processes? Or is there a shadow, so to speak, of propositional content, such that the bear might be said to conclude that smoke is to be avoided?
I think we can get some insight by consulting our own mental behavior when beliefs arise, but I'll stop here. — J
J
I reject the idea that language-less animals' belief(s) have propositional content. — creativesoul
Feeling pain after touching fire causes an animal to infer/conclude that touching fire caused the pain — creativesoul
Feeling pain after touching fire causes an animal to infer/conclude that touching fire caused the pain
— creativesoul
But if we agree that this does not occur in the space of propositions, then what do you mean by "infer" or "conclude"? What is a nonlinguistic conclusion?
That's the problem I want to home in on. — J
J
A non-linguistic inference/conclusion is one that is arrived at via a language less creature. — creativesoul
On my view, thought and/or belief cannot be reduced in/to purely physical terms or mental terms. That is because thought and belief consist in part of both and are thus not properly accounted for by either a purely physical or a purely 'mental'(non-physical) framework. — creativesoul
What is a conclusion that is not put into words? — J
In this example, the creature recognizes/attributes causality; recognizes and/or attributes a causal relationship between their own behaviour and the subsequent pain. — creativesoul
Can you say more about what that would be, phenomenologically? — J
J
I reject phenomenology. — creativesoul
Propositions are existentially dependent upon language. Where there has never been language, there could have never been propositions. I'm not sure if I rightly understand what the W3 sense is. — creativesoul
the linguistic/nonlinguistic dichotomy is incapable of taking proper account of language less thought and belief, particularly in terms of the content thereof. — creativesoul
the linguistic/nonlinguistic dichotomy is incapable of taking proper account of language less thought and belief, particularly in terms of the content thereof.
— creativesoul
Say more about that? Do you mean, the dichotomy is too rigid? — J
...propositions have the peculiar property of being true or false (for example) regardless of whether anyone asserts them... — J
What does an unarticulated proposition consist of? — creativesoul
Right, that's the question. — J
the linguistic/nonlinguistic dichotomy is incapable of taking proper account of language less thought and belief, particularly in terms of the content thereof.
— creativesoul
Say more about that? Do you mean, the dichotomy is too rigid?
— J
Sort of. The content of a language less creature's thought and belief can include/consist of stuff that is existentially dependent upon language. — creativesoul
OK, but I still wish I understood what the "stuff" was. — J
J
A cat can think/believe that a mouse is on the mat . . . . [these are] elemental constituents of the cat's thought/belief. . . The cat is a language less animal capable of forming thought/belief that consists of elemental constituents — creativesoul
There is no such thing as unarticulated proposition. — creativesoul
But at this very moment (or so goes the usual story) there are propositions about all sorts of things, which are either true or false, yet unarticulated. — J
But you're just re-asserting all this. I'm asking why you believe it's true, and what such thoughts or beliefs consist of, if not words? Does the cat perhaps think in images? Can she believe using images? I'm not trying to be difficult, or imply that there are no good answers to my questions, but we need a lot more clarity on what's being proposed. What is the "stuff" that allows this account to go forward? — J
Your objections are very much in line with Rödl's concerns. He's a tough read, but Self-Consciousness and Objectivity has a lot to recommend it. There was also a long thread jumping off from his re-evaluation of what a proposition is; I believe it's the thread called "p and 'I think p'". — J
J
What are you wanting to know? — creativesoul
what [do] such thoughts or beliefs consist of, if not words? Does the cat perhaps think in images? Can she believe using images? — J
All thought and belief reduce to correlations drawn between different things. — creativesoul
It sounds to me, if I can say this without giving offense, that you've grown used to your own views in this area (and that happens to us all, of course) and you may not realize how un-obvious they are without further explanation. — J
It's a topic that interests me, and I'm genuinely curious to see if we can put together a picture of how non-linguistic creatures may or may not engage in a rudimentary form of reasoning.
But you have re-interrogate each of the terms you're using and try to say exactly what they mean. Perhaps start with "non-linguistic belief"? That's the one I find most puzzling.
J
Perhaps start with "non-linguistic belief"? That's the one I find most puzzling.
I have no burden regarding that terminological use. You first invoked it. I rejected it. — creativesoul
I reject the idea that language less animals' belief(s) have propositional content. — creativesoul
Perhaps start with "non-linguistic belief"? That's the one I find most puzzling.
I have no burden regarding that terminological use. You first invoked it. I rejected it.
— creativesoul
But you said:
I reject the idea that language less animals' belief(s) have propositional content.
— creativesoul
So if a language-less animal has a belief -- moreover, a belief without propositional content -- isn't it by definition a non-linguistic belief? I'm confused. — J
First of all, I do not talk in terms of "non-linguistic belief" for reasons already explained. — creativesoul
J
Hope that helps. — creativesoul
the above words are mine, and they're misleading at best, and downright false at worst. — creativesoul
Yes, a bit clearer. One thing first, though: Is the reason that "some things are existentially dependent upon language (like mats, tables, cars, etc.)" because those objects are human artifacts? — J
If it's the human-made aspect that makes the difference, how would a language-less animal know about it or be aware of it? — J
I'm a little puzzled about why a mat, e.g., would depend on language for its existence. — J
If I make an object but don't give it a name, does it exist in some lesser way? Probably I'm just not seeing what you're getting at. — J
J
This notion of existential dependency is not to be confused/conflated with subsistence. It's better understood as initial emergence requirements. — creativesoul
textile technology is existentially dependent upon language and mats are existentially dependent upon textile technology. — creativesoul
language less belief can include (consist of) some things that are existentially dependent upon language (like mats, tables, cars, etc.) and all things that are existentially dependent upon language could sensibly/rightly be called 'linguistic' things — creativesoul
It's a bit disheartening that you say what you said at the end. — creativesoul
Dawnstorm
So the idea is that some objects can't come into existence without a language-using community. That makes sense.
The challenge here would be: But natural objects also "come into existence" as a result of language use. — J
A cat can think/believe that a mouse is on the mat. The content of the cat's thought/belief includes the mouse(which is not existentially dependent upon language) and the mat(which is). — creativesoul
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