They are just different kinds of existence as generally conceived is all. — Janus
he'd then be right that they can't hold thoughts, but clearly can have thoughts, — Shamshir
The only way I can understand having or holding a thought or belief is that we do it by deliberately formulating thoughts and beliefs into determinate conceptual structures, and this requires language. Neuroscience tells us that there are neural connections constantly being made and forming complex networks which persist in brains provided they are fulfilling some function.
I have no doubt animal brains form such persistent neural structures, which enables them to recognize entities and features of their environments, but I don't see animals as experiencing themselves holding specific thoughts or beliefs. We don't really know since we are not non-linguistic animals, so we only say what seems most plausible — Janus
If by 'having thoughts" you just mean that they think, then I have no problem with that, but if you mean that they hold specific thoughts in mind, then no. — Janus
No matter how fleeting, if a creature forms thought/belief, it holds and/or has it.... even if only for a moment. — creativesoul
Having specific thoughts in mind is to think about thought/belief, — creativesoul
We cannot say what existence or being is in some more fundamental terms, but it is an indispensable idea. We can conceive of different kinds of existence, what more do you want?
You can't dispense with the idea of existence, because you use it in your term "existential dependency" to distinguish the idea that something is dependent on something else for its very existence, from other forms of mere functional dependency. If you use some alternative term it can only be an analogue of 'existence', otherwise it won't perform the conceptual job you want it to. — Janus
Having specific thoughts in mind is to think about thought/belief,
— creativesoul
No, it's not. You can have a specific thought in mind without thinking about thought at all. — Janus
You can't dispense with the idea of existence, because you use it in your term "existential dependency" to distinguish the idea that something is dependent on something else for its very existence, from other forms of mere functional dependency. If you use some alternative term it can only be an analogue of 'existence', otherwise it won't perform the conceptual job you want it to. — Janus
Having specific thoughts in mind is to think about thought/belief,
— creativesoul
No, it's not. You can have a specific thought in mind without thinking about thought at all.
— Janus
Alright...
What's the difference between having specific thoughts and having specific thoughts in mind? — creativesoul
The only way to show that you are having a specific thought is to to be able to repeat it; to be able to have it in mind again and again at will. That is what I would call holding a thought. — Janus
Terminological differences then I guess. — Janus
The only way to show that you are having a specific thought is to to be able to repeat it; to be able to have it in mind again and again at will. That is what I would call holding a thought. — Janus
the thoughts animals may momentarily entertain cannot be held... — Janus
When Kant said that existence is not a predicate, what he meant is that existence is not a property that things can either possess or fail to possess.
That is along the lines of what I meant when I said that there is nothing (excluding logical contradictions like "round triangles" which are merely words incoherently strung together) that doesn't exist or hasn't existed in some way or other. — Janus
Kant did not argue against talking in terms of existence tout court but against imagining that existence is a property which something may either possess or not. The difficulty I find for you is that you argue against talking in terms of existence and yet you need to talk in terms of existence to make your distinction between existential dependency and other forms of dependency, and also to make your claim that the existence of what we think about is presupposed in the thinking about it. You have not convinced me that you can do without that distinction — Janus
Animals can entertain thoughts that they cannot hold. — creativesoul
I'm having quite a bit of trouble understanding how someone can bring past thought/belief back in mind - whenever they wish - without thinking about past thought/belief. — creativesoul
You simply think repeatedly anything you have previously thought. You don't need to think about the thought itself or about your re-thinking it in order to re-think it... — Janus
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