what does that mean? What is the difference between saying an infant is dependent on the mother and an infant is existentially dependent on the mother? What is the difference between being dependent and existentially dependent? It just seems superfluous. — Blue Lux
what is your take on sythentic a priori judgments? Or propositions based upon them? — Blue Lux
But wouldn't something's existence be the whole of all the things about it? — Blue Lux
And if one aspect is dependent on something that it is not, wouldn't it make it existentially dependent on it?
But wouldn't something's existence be the whole of all the things about it? — Blue Lux
Creative seems to believe that justification, truth, and knowledge are prelinguistic. — Sam26
My position is that all epistemological constructs are necessarily dependent on language. — Sam26
Regarding the idea of prelinguistic knowledge(justified true belief)...
1. Creative knows that belief exists prior to language.
2. Creative knows that being justified is being well-grounded.
3. Creative knows that the act of justification does not cause the belief statement being argued for to be well-grounded; rather it is the act of providing those grounds.
4. Creative knows that well-grounded belief is not existentially dependent upon justification.
5. Creative knows that the attribution/recognition of causality can be well grounded.
6. Creative knows that a prelinguistic creature can believe that touching fire caused discomfort/pain.
7. Creative knows that that well grounded belief can happen prior to language.
8. Creative knows that touching fire causes discomfort.
9. Creative knows that that particular well-grounded true belief is prior to language. — creativesoul
the act of justification does not cause the belief statement being argued for to be well-grounded; rather it is the act of providing those grounds. — creativesoul
A belief does not need to be argued for in order for it to be well-grounded. — creativesoul
I agree, we express beliefs all the time that can be justified, or that are well-grounded, without putting forth the reasons or evidence for those beliefs. — Sam26
However, there are some beliefs that don't fall into this epistemological language-game. Those are Wittgenstein's hinge-propositions or bedrock beliefs. They are grounded, but they are grounded in a way of acting, i.e., my actions show or demonstrate that I have the belief. Is this what you're saying? — Sam26
This kind of grounding seems to be a bit different than what you're saying. Being well-grounded seems to imply something more, not sure, I'll keep reading your explanations.
A language-less creature can touch fire. Touching fire causes discomfort. Some language-less creatures can touch fire, feel discomfort, and attribute causality by virtue of inferring that touching fire caused the discomfort. All attribution of causality is thought and belief. That creature thinks, believes, and otherwise infers that touching fire caused the discomfort. That creature's belief is true. That creature's belief is well-grounded. That creature's belief cannot consist of language. That creature's belief cannot consist of propositions. That creature's belief cannot be existentially dependent upon language. That creature's belief cannot be existentially dependent upon justification. Not all well-grounded true belief is existentially dependent upon language. Not all well-grounded true belief is existentially dependent upon justification. — creativesoul
That creature's thought, belief, and/or inference consists of correlations drawn between it's own behaviour(touching fire) and the discomfort that followed. None of this is existentially dependent upon language aside from this report itself.
Some well-grounded true belief exists prior to language. All well-grounded true belief is justified true belief(knowledge). Some justified true belief exists prior to language. All justification is existentially dependent upon language. Some well-grounded true belief is not existentially dependent upon justification. — creativesoul
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