So we can all agree that if someone doesn't believe in p then he believes that p is false, and vice versa. — MathematicalPhysicist
that would be translated to ~B(~p), not B(~p) — Mr Phil O'Sophy
that would be translated to ~B(~p), not B(~p) — Mr Phil O'Sophy
it would be:
1. I don't believe you had Weetabix
is equivalent to
2. I believe you didn't have Weetabix. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
1. I believe you don't have a brother.
2. I don't believe you have a brother.
are both not saying that as far as i'm concerned, you don't have a brother? — Mr Phil O'Sophy
As that does leave it open to an ambiguity I guess, but I don't think when people say that in isolation that they mean 3.
'I neither believe nor disbelieve that you have a brother.'
— Mr Phil O'Sophy
. I think its more likely that if they mean 3. they say it, whereas if they say three, they imply 1, unless otherwise stated. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
~B(Ex~P(x)) — fdrake
I lack belief in some things which are not gazoompas. — fdrake
You don't believe I ate W and you don't believe I didn't eat W, then what do you believe: did I eat or didn't I? — MathematicalPhysicist
We have ~Bp & ~B~p, the question is do we have BpvB~p? — MathematicalPhysicist
How can someone believe something and also believe its negation at the same time? — MathematicalPhysicist
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