Do you think that if the premise is changed to: "Holding on to unsupported belief always leads to uninformed acts" is more clear then? — Christoffer
but just extending the time doesn't help much. — Rank Amateur
after proved false or unreasonable is still better. — Rank Amateur
The point being that unsupported does not mean true or not true, fact or not fact, reasonable or unreasonable - it just means unsupported. — Rank Amateur
And some unsupported ideas will lead to good things an some to bad and some to neutral. — Rank Amateur
I don't see the link you are trying to make - sorry. — Rank Amateur
What do all beliefs have in common such that that is what makes them belief? — creativesoul
Have you read previous posts in this dialectic? Maybe you find answers there. I've written in detail about this numerous times in this thread.
In essence belief (outside of unsupported belief which is just emotional ideas conceptualized out of chaotic memory) is a posteriori out of facts. — Christoffer
You might need to explain your question better if you want another answer.
That is, you've given two kinds of belief. You've explained which kind qualifies as which. Unsupported belief... and all belief that is not unsupported.
Two kinds of belief.
I am asking what makes them all belief. What do all belief have in common that make them what they are, such that whenever anything has this commonality... it too... is a kind of belief. You've enumerated and explained a plethora of ways that they are different beliefs. You've yet to have delivered a clear cut easy to understand criterion for what counts as being a belief. — creativesoul
Belief is prior to language. — creativesoul
Well grounded belief is as well. — creativesoul
True belief is as well. — creativesoul
What are your thoughts regarding these claims? — creativesoul
I think you aren't really looking into what I actually present in my argument. Why is the Type-scale not working for you? What is unclear about its definition? — Christoffer
What do all belief have in common that makes them belief?
I've explained the issue clearly. You have no criterion for what counts as belief. You are talking about the ground for belief, not the belief itself.
The question above needs answered. — creativesoul
The parenthetical content above highlights a flaw.
That is, you've given two kinds of belief. You've explained which kind qualifies as which. Unsupported belief... and all belief that is not unsupported.
Two kinds of belief.
I am asking what makes them all belief. — creativesoul
The question doesn't make sense really. Belief is the ideas in your head about the world around you. — Christoffer
I get your point, but I think you are fragmenting belief into the concept's smallest parts. — Christoffer
So, all belief consists of ideas in the head about the world around us. — creativesoul
Statements of belief are not in the head. They are belief. Therefore, not all belief is in the head. — creativesoul
Some belief is about ourselves. They are belief. Therefore, not all belief is about the world around us. — creativesoul
Belief is prior to language. That which is prior to language cannot be existentially dependent upon it. Belief is not a concept. My charge here is that your conception of "belief" is inherently inadequate for taking proper account of belief. — creativesoul
You demand a simple answer and I gave it. — Christoffer
Belief does not exist without human thinking about something and starting to believe something, out of that comes to different types of belief.
You cannot detach the belief from humans, even if a belief was written down and people forgot the one expressing the belief, it is still an expressed belief from that forgotten person.
You are taking different concepts of belief and counter-argue the basic definition with that there's "too many versions of belief and therefore you can't define it".
...I can go on and write an entire essay on belief without really breaking the argument I made. — Christoffer
All belief is existentially dependent upon the believing creature. That is, all belief emerges onto the world stage by virtue of a creature capable of drawing correlations between different things. — creativesoul
All belief is existentially dependent upon the believing creature. That is, all belief emerges onto the world stage by virtue of a creature capable of drawing correlations between different things. — creativesoul
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