Sam26         
         
charleton         
         ↪creativesoul Both belief and doubt are conceptual, actions are inadequate to express these.
An observer might infer them from the actions of one whose language is not developed, such as a child having an idea that a treat under a cup, but the belief that the treat is under the cup is not a belief in the child. — charleton
bloodninja         
         If the language-less child believes that there is a treat under the cup, then it's belief cannot consist of the terms used to report upon it. What else could it consist in/of — creativesoul
Sam26         
         Both belief and doubt are conceptual, actions are inadequate to express these. An observer might infer them from the actions of one whose language is not developed, such as a child having an idea that a treat under a cup, but the belief that the treat is under the cup is not a belief in the child. — charleton
charleton         
         
Sam26         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.