It looks to me that the dog knows when the cat is angry sans a common language. — unenlightened
I think a belief can be justified without anyone actually justifying it. A cat is justified in believing there is a mouse in the mousehole by its sense of smell, it does not require a syllogism as well. — unenlightened
Knowledge along with the necessary ingredient of justification is only done with propositions, i.e., in a linguistic setting. Beliefs can take place apart from a linguistic setting, and this is seen by the actions of the one having the belief. — Sam26
I did say earlier that there is a correct use of the word soul — Sam26
One of the reasons it's incorrect is that there is no way to demonstrate that it's incorrect or not. That's also part of the reason the beetle example is also senseless, because there is no way for us to establish a correct or incorrect use of the word beetle. — Sam26
Think of it in terms of how we learn to use the word pain, we learn based on the rules of use that happen socially, but these rules are rules that have a correction built into them (like mathematics), and it's observable. I can observe if you call someone's joyful acts, painful, that that is incorrect. Let's say that there were no outward signs of pain, would you think it had sense? Would you think it had sense if we attached a definition to it? — Sam26
so it's not that an individual can't create meaning via their own private sensations, even though that's true, it's that no person or persons can do it. — Sam26
Ask yourself, what would it mean to be incorrect in this particular use of the word soul, it's a kind of self-sealing use of the word. — Sam26
You appear to consider the use of the word 'soul' as equivalent to Wittgenstein's 'beetle' because one person doesn't know what the next person has in their box (in either case). Is that a fair description of your position? — Luke
I believe you exaggerate the importance of language, — unenlightened
We all think in the form that our sensory impressions take. — Harry Hindu
I may email Mr Chomsky again and point him to this discussion. — Gary McKinnon
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.