There exists some x such that Ralph believes y(y is a spy) of x. — mosesquine
Quine formalizes 'Ralph believes there is a spy' as:
There exists some x such that Ralph believes y(y is a spy) of x. — mosesquine
But I just said this: the better approach is to simply talk about what's present in an individual's mind on a particular occasion of an utterance. — Terrapin Station
When you realize and don't shy away from the fact that what Ralph believes depends solely on what's present in Ralph's mind on a particular occasion, attempts to parse it in some uniform way simply seem silly. — Terrapin Station
..what is present in the individual's mind is the proper context of the utterance — Metaphysician Undercover
One odd thing about 'Ralph believes there is a spy' is that the primary propositional attitude is that of the unnamed maker of the sentence, and yet this anonymous sentence-maker is generally ignored in all these ravellings and unravellings of purported logical form. When I read 'Ralph believes there is a spy' my first question is about the credibility of the writer-about-Ralph, not of Ralph. — mcdoodle
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