I disagree because I would count all linguistic beliefs as having been already expressed; otherwise how would they count as linguistic? A linguistic belief might not be expressed out loud in a particular instance, but that is another matter. — Janus
I disagree because I would count all linguistic beliefs as having been already expressed; otherwise how would they count as linguistic? — Janus
To make this work it would have to be related back to the cat not being able to believe it will be fed next Tuesday while believing it has four feet. The thesis would be that social facts can be explained in terms of beliefs about beliefs. — Banno
I didn't disbelieve it. — Janus
Right, but the "sedimentation" is, I think biological at base. So, I suspect some (perhaps most?) animals have a sense of self, but, lacking symbolic language, they have no generalized, absract idea of self. We have both, and our having both is on account of us being language users. — Janus
...every belief is a relation between an agent and a proposition... — Banno
It seems to me you want to be able to distinguish the beliefs of animals from those of people, using language in some way. — Banno
You tried to do this by ascribing unexpressed beliefs to animals, and expressed beliefs to people. But that doesn't work.
What might work would be to differentiate between beliefs about brute facts and beliefs about social facts. Social facts are dependent on being said; hence the dog believes it will be fed, but not that it will be fed next Tuesday - because "Tuesday" is socially constructed, and hence not accessible to an agent who is outside the social, linguistic frame - who does not participate in the language game of days of the week.
What do brute facts and social facts have in common such that having that commonality makes them facts? — creativesoul
Check out Generative_adversarial_network — Banno
...probably the time is at hand when it will be once and again understood WHAT has actually sufficed for the basis of such imposing and absolute philosophical edifices as the dogmatists have hitherto reared: perhaps some popular superstition of immemorial time (such as the soul-superstition, which, in the form of subject- and ego-superstition, has not yet ceased doing mischief): perhaps some play upon words, a deception on the part of grammar... — Nietzsche
What do brute facts and social facts have in common such that having that commonality makes them facts?
— creativesoul
They are true. — Banno
Were creativesoul talks of "all belief consists of correlations drawn between different things" he seems ot me to say nothing more than that beliefs are beliefs about propositions; about states of affairs - after all, what is a proposition if not a correlation?
So I don't see that it adds much to the conversation. — Banno
If the thing was charismatic enough, it might found a religion. — path
Proposals consist entirely of language use — creativesoul
Not all correlations are propositions.
— creativesoul
For example... — Banno
But what if you met a synthetic philosopher? And they were erudite, interesting and challenging?
Perhaps you have. — Banno
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