...the belief itself... is "a description of one's mental state"
You're not saying that "I believe" is a description of one's mental state; you're saying that the certainty/doubt associated with a belief is a description of one's mental state. — Luke
They are virtually innumerable such true statements(if that's what you mean by "truths") about one that they cannot assert about themselves without sounding 'absurd'. — creativesoul
They are virtually innumerable such true statements(if that's what you mean by "truths") about one that they cannot assert about themselves without sounding 'absurd'.
— creativesoul
Speak for yourself. — Ciceronianus the White
I would guess that 'It is raining' is about the weather, whereas 'I believe it is raining' is about one's belief. The belief may be implied by the former statement, but it is not asserted. Perhaps your views are different to Moore's. — Luke
This misses the point. In the present tense, 'P' and 'I believe that P' have the same meaning, as Ramsey contends. However, Wittgenstein's example demonstrates that these two statements each have a different meaning in the past tense. Since 'P' and 'I believe that P' do not have the same meaning in the past tense, then Ramsey is incorrect to make the unqualified assertion that they both have the same meaning/use. — Luke
The statement “I believe it’s going to rain” has a meaning like, that is to say a use like, “It’s going to rain”, but the meaning of “I believed then that it was going to rain”, is not like that of “It did rain then”. (PI, p.190) — Isaac
I consider this a unique view of the matter. This would imply that all assertions are about beliefs rather than, e.g., about the world. — Luke
Surely there are at least some cases in which we know for certain whether it did in fact rain, like the time I got drenched walking home without an umbrella. — Luke
If Wittgenstein's aim is to show that 'I believe...' is not a description of my own mental state, or that this is not how the expression 'I believe...' is used, then how is Wittgenstein making it a psychological issue? He is trying to avoid viewing it as a psychological issue. — Luke
...it is generally impossible for us to have a belief about a belief — Isaac
my beliefs about the world trigger word selection — Isaac
I would concur... completely... if... we added beliefs about ourselves too... we are both objects in the world, and subjects taking account of it, and/or ourselves. — creativesoul
The whole of psychology is the forming if inferences about the human mind as an object, despite using the human mind, as ourselves, to make those inferences.
Some see that as problematic, I don't, but it's worth remembering which we're talking about and not mixing the two. — Isaac
the assertion can be about nothing else but the belief (not the fact of their belief, the content of it) — Isaac
A belief in the sense I'm talking about, is an inference about the state of the world. — Isaac
what you called the belief's 'content' above, that's the inference about the state of the world. (And 'inference' you're using here not in the sense of 'an act of inferring' but in the sense of 'a conclusion reached by an act of inferring,' — Srap Tasmaner
a proposition, yes? — Srap Tasmaner
So beliefs are about the world and assertions are about the content of beliefs, namely, inferences that have been made about the world. — Srap Tasmaner
suppose I have inferred that Dewey defeated Truman, and I hold a belief the content of which is 'Dewey defeated Truman.' If I were to assert that Dewey defeated Truman, for instance by saying, 'Dewey defeated Truman,' I would be, as I understand it, saying something about the proposition (expressed here as) 'Dewey defeated Truman,' the content of a belief I hold. What would I be saying about it? That it is true? — Srap Tasmaner
The photograph thing is clever. I had matter-of-factly observed that we can't deduce p from someone's asserting p -- never occurred to me to imagine deducing p from my believing that p.
But this is another point of divergence between the first- and not-first-person cases: we regularly infer p from the fact, which we (let's say) infer from what they say, that someone trustworthy, either in general or just in the matter at hand, believes that p. It is plausibly our principal way of gathering knowledge. This sort of inference is clearly reasonable even if we grant the point at the top, that there's no logical but only probable implication to be had here. — Srap Tasmaner
That just seems to beg the question. If we're going to assume the object of propositions from the outset, then we're only going to get limited range of possible solutions to the paradox. — Isaac
The statement “I believe it’s going to rain” has a meaning like, that is to say a use like, “It’s going to rain”, but the meaning of “I believed then that it was going to rain”, is not like that of “It did rain then”. (PI, p.190)
— Isaac
Believe has a different past tense use to it's present tense use. I don't understand what might be so problematic about this, lots of words have different uses in different contexts. — Isaac
If assertions are 'about' the world, then how does the world become the subject? When I form the words constituting the assertion, how does the world tell me which words to choose without first being inferred by my beliefs about it? — Isaac
I think this is just a lack of clarity about what 'psychological' refers to here. — Isaac
We cannot say the same of ourselves, while it's happening to us, because it's happening to us; which means that we are the one lacking true belief about the weather. — creativesoul
A proposition is a speech act. — Isaac
Not all beliefs can be properly expressed as propositions. — Isaac
We cannot say the same of ourselves, while it's happening to us, because it's happening to us; which means that we are the one lacking true belief about the weather.
— creativesoul
What is the "true statement about ourselves" here? — Ciceronianus the White
Others can say it about us, when we're mistaken about the weather, but we cannot say it about ourselves in the same scenario, when we're mistaken about the weather, without sounding absurd.
"I do not believe that it's raining outside, but I'm wrong" describes the very same scenario as "It's raining but I do not believe it". — creativesoul
Others can say it about us, when we're mistaken about the weather, but we cannot say it about ourselves in the same scenario, when we're mistaken about the weather, without sounding absurd.
"I do not believe that it's raining outside, but I'm wrong" describes the very same scenario as "It's raining but I do not believe it".
— creativesoul
Yes. — Ciceronianus the White
But you said there are virtually an innumerable number of true statements we cannot make about ourselves without sounding absurd. — Ciceronianus the White
In what sense are the statements "I do not believe that it's raining outside, but I'm wrong?" or "It's raining but I do not believe it" true? — Ciceronianus the White
I assume they'd have to be made by someone who doesn't believe something is taking place though aware it's taking place, or someone who knows something is taking place but does not believe it's not taking place. Otherwise, it strikes me they wouldn't be true statements.
Who would make such "true statements" in virtually innumerable instances? — Ciceronianus the White
I'm just trying to make sense of Moore's paradox by way of McGinn's article. I tried to answer the question you raised about her article. I'm not interested in a debate over realism/idealism. — Luke
Wittgenstein's point is that the meanings of the present-tense statements "I believe it's going to rain" and "It's going to rain" are equivalent, but the meanings of the past-tense statements "I believed then that it was going to rain" and "It did rain then" are not equivalent. It's not simply that the meaning of each statement changes due to tense, but that the meaning of the two statements is not equivalent in the past-tense, as it is in the present-tense. — Luke
Wittgenstein's example intends to demonstrate that these different statements do not "all amount to the same thing" or have the same meaning in the past tense. — Luke
How do you get from 'making assertions about the world' to 'the world tells me which words to choose'? I can't make any sense of this. — Luke
something is getting garbled when you also tell the causal story of how we produce an utterance, and then call what caused the utterance what the utterance is 'about'. I'm just not getting the connection you see between the causal chain or process that results in an utterance and 'aboutness.' If I assert, by making an utterance, that this is how things stand, what I'm talking about is how things stand. Your occasional use of 'about' to mean something else has me befuddled. — Srap Tasmaner
Not all beliefs can be properly expressed as propositions. — Isaac
Example? — Srap Tasmaner
Not all beliefs can be properly expressed as propositions. — Isaac
Example?
— Srap Tasmaner
I couldn't very well do that without thereby disproving my theory could I? — Isaac
It's not about idealism. recognising that the access we have to the real world is indirect does not entail idealism. — Isaac
All I'm saying here is that if you're trying to make sense of Moore's paradox, it limits your options to simply assume that the proper object of an utterance is the real world and the truth judgement of that utterance is the state of the world. You may well have ideological commitments by which you'd like to assume that from the outset, and that's fine. I'm only saying that my understanding of the paradox doesn't assume those things and so we're not going to get any further if yours does. — Isaac
That seems the same to me. "I believe it's raining" can be a description of one's state of mind (as I gave the example of someone reading off a super-advanced fMRI scan of their own brain), it just rarely is, but nothing is preventing it from being so. As such, it is this meaning which is implied when the sentence is in the past tense. The other meaning ("It's raining") is expressed in the past tense as "I believe it was raining". I don't really see what insight Wittgenstein is pointing at here. — Isaac
The following two (present tense) statements have the same meaning/use:
(1) "I believe it's going to rain"; and
(2) "It's going to rain"
Both (1) and (2) mean the same as (2). — Luke
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.