This is all well and good, but rules are immanent to use, and it's not a case of 'group consensus' which determimes them, as if from above and without. — StreetlightX
And it is the case that some rules are determined by group consensus — Sam26
All languages are based on rules of use, so in that sense one doesn't just get to arbitrarily choose one's own meaning, no more that you would choose to move a piece in chess one way when the rules dictate another. The rules when set up may be arbitrary, but once set, like the rules of chess, you don't get to arbitrarily suspend the rules to suit your own particular view of the game. If you did you wouldn't be playing chess. — Sam26
Both subjective.But okay, how about this one?
Sally: "Casablanca is the best movie ever made".
Fred, "Nope, it's clearly the Godfather." — Marchesk
Objective (2nd part subjective).Peter: "I did not like the Godfather. It insists upon itself." — Marchesk
Subjective.Millenial: "Second and third Matrix movies were better than the first." — Marchesk
All languages are based on rules of use, so in that sense one doesn't just get to arbitrarily choose one's own meaning, no more that you would choose to move a piece in chess one way when the rules dictate another. — Sam26
Consider what Wittgenstein demonstrates at the beginning of The Philosophical Investigations. If learning a language consisted of learning rules, then one would already have to know a language in order to learn a language, because the rules would have to be communicated to that person, via language. This is what drove him to inquire into private rules, and private language, to account for the capacity to understand rules, if learning rules is necessarily prior to using language. But that whole line of investigation breaks down into nonsense. So we ought to conclude that learning language does not consist of learning rules at all. — Metaphysician Undercover
Value statements are subjective. All other statements are objective. — Harry Hindu
Simple. "I was daydreaming that I was flying" is an objective statement about the state of some mind.What do you see as the difference between a value statement and something like "I was daydreaming that I was flying" that makes one subjective and the other objective? — Terrapin Station
No. Statements about the state of some mind wouldn't be value statements. They would be objective statements about the state of some mind. Only when you attempt to project value (as it relates to how it affects your goals) onto some state of affairs do you become subjective.You do not believe that value statements are about the state of some mind? — Terrapin Station
Just look at the questions you posed.Also, why would you think that some people are saying that minds are not part of the world? — Terrapin Station
"Daydreaming that you are flying is a waste of time." is a subjective statement because it might not be a waste of time outside of your mind. Now, if you were to say that "I believe that daydreaming is a waste of time." — Harry Hindu
No. Statements about the state of some mind wouldn't be value statements. — Harry Hindu
Just look at the questions you posed. — Harry Hindu
No. Go back and read my post.The person might have a mistaken belief that by saying "Daydreaming that you are flying is a waste of time," they're saying something different than "I believe that daydreaming that you are flying is a waste of time," but the person would simply have a mistaken belief. What they're really doing is the same thing in both cases. — Terrapin Station
Is the person mistaken that they have a belief? — Harry Hindu
So you can't make a distinction between a belief and some actual state-of-affairs? — Harry Hindu
So then every statement of yours in every one of your posts isn't about some state-of-affairs - like "You can't state something that isn't a belief."? So "You can't state something that isn't a belief" really isn't some state-of-affairs. It is a belief. So that means "You can't state something that isn't a belief" isn't really true outside of your own mind.I said "You can't state something that isn't a belief." — Terrapin Station
So then every statement of yours in every one of your posts isn't about some state-of-affairs — Harry Hindu
But beliefs can be wrong. States-of-affairs just are. Are you not sure that you have beliefs?That a statement is about some state of affairs doesn't imply that the statement isn't a belief. — Terrapin Station
Sure.But beliefs can be wrong. States-of-affairs just are. — Harry Hindu
Yes, of course I'm sure I have beliefs.Are you not sure that you have beliefs?
I didn't say that satatements can't be about states of affairs. — Terrapin Station
When beliefs are wrong then they necessarily can't be about some state of affairs. — Harry Hindu
When they are right they necessarily are about some state of affairs. — Harry Hindu
You said:Yes, of course I'm sure I have beliefs.
What does any of that have to do with anything I just said? — Terrapin Station
You can't statement something that isn't a belief. — Terrapin Station
But beliefs can be wrong. — Harry Hindu
then how can you be sure that you have beliefs? — Harry Hindu
But it isn't about the igneous rock if the igneous rock isn't polka-dotted. You'd be referring to the igneous rock in your head, not the one outside of it. So it's really an issue of making a category mistake.Of course they can be. "Igneous rock is always polka-dotted" is wrong, but it's about igneous rock. "About" is a term that tells us what we're referring to semantically in the sentence in question, or what we're thinking of in a thought that we have. (What we're referring to semantically in a sentence is what we're thinking of, really.) — Terrapin Station
But we are on a philosophy forum where we are skeptical about the very nature of knowledge itself.For some reason you're thinking "If it's possible to be wrong about x, then I can't be sure about x," but that's not actually how psychology works. — Terrapin Station
But it isn't about the igneous rock if the igneous rock isn't polka-dotted — Harry Hindu
But we are on a philosophy forum where we are skeptical about the very nature of knowledge itself. — Harry Hindu
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