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
Each and every time one is mistaken - and those situations are innumerable - there are most certainly at least a few true statements about the scenario, that that particular individual cannot say about themselves without sounding absurd, despite the fact that others can say without issue. That is the scenario put forth by Moore. — creativesoul
Your first and last paragraph are in direct conflict with one another. — creativesoul
Each and every time one is mistaken - and those situations are innumerable - there are most certainly at least a few true statements about the scenario, that that particular individual cannot say about themselves without sounding absurd, despite the fact that others can say without issue. That is the scenario put forth by Moore.
— creativesoul
There's no mistake, not really — Ciceronianus the White
...Here are two answers to the question, 'Does Santa fly around the world in a helicopter delivering toys on Christmas Eve?':
(1) No, it's a sleigh pulled by eight (sometimes nine) magic reindeer who can fly;
(2) No, because Santa Claus doesn't exist, so he doesn't fly in anything.
Both are defensible answers, and which is preferred depends on circumstances. — Srap Tasmaner
Because in-world I lives in a world that has actual tables and actual books to put on them. In-world, these things are all quite real. It's the whole point of having the model. It's the whole reason our brains generate the virtual reality to start with. The tables in in-world-I's world aren't artifacts of the in-world-model of the in-world-world in in-world-I's in-world brain; they're just tables. — Srap Tasmaner
There's no circumstance, however, where we would say "It's raining but I don't believe it is" unless there was something seriously wrong with us, or unless we're playing games. There is no truth to the statement. It sounds absurd because it would never be said by a normal person in a normal situation, but nor would it ever be thought true. It might be thought to be a statement made by someone seriously ill, but that obviously isn't what Moore intends. I think there is no paradox because there is nothing "true" about Moore's contrivance. — Ciceronianus the White
Even in isolation the utterances have quite different pragmatics – 'I believe it's raining' is weaker, in that it implies a hedge, and puts less pressure on the audience on the uptake. Cf. 'I believe it's raining, but I'm not sure if it is,' versus 'It's raining, but I'm not sure if it is.' — Snakes Alive
"I believe it's raining" (taken as a psychological statement) is not in the same model as "It's raining", it's talking about how the model of 'raining' is being formed - by my believing it to be the case. — Isaac
If we're in the shared model where "It's raining" just means that in-world clouds are dropping in-world water, then "I believe it's raining" is not truth-evaluable by me. My beliefs about this model are assumed to be the case, that's the game we're playing when we talk about stuff in-world. — Isaac
Our beliefs about whether it's raining are the authors of the story in which it's raining. — Isaac
around here 'believe' is usually shoptalk that's just neutral on the confidence with which you believe. — Srap Tasmaner
As OLP birthed or transformed into pragmatics, it became clear that reading those cases as questions of 'what makes sense' is not so simple: what makes sense is sometimes what fits the pragmatics rather than what is truth-apt or something. — Srap Tasmaner
Such a profound insight. And all that was needed to arrive at it was to pretend that a statement which would not be made was made, and was "true." — Ciceronianus the White
Oh no. I've made an assertion I don't believe without saying I don't believe it. That's absurd, isn't it? Why is that? — Ciceronianus the White
people worry all the time about whether their beliefs are true, and they do so within the shared model, accepting those presuppositions. — Srap Tasmaner
an individual can clearly believe it's raining when it isn't. — Srap Tasmaner
in what sense is my at this moment belief not truth-evaluable by me — Srap Tasmaner
Your at this moment belief is not truth-evaluable by you not because you are prisoner of your at this moment mental model, but because you have already evaluated its truth. — Srap Tasmaner
If, however, we simply accept that for certain classes of belief, in certain contexts of use, "I believe it's raining" is simply the same as "It's raining" and the same as "It's true that it's raining", then the paradox is solved Macintosh is saying "I believe it's raining, I believe it isn't raining" which is a contradiction, McGillicuddy is saying "Macintosh believes it's raining, I don't believe it's raining" which is not a contradiction". Wittgenstein's objection to this solution I've covered above with Luke, is only a problem if one mixes one of the many other senses in which "I believe" could be used, many of which would also make sense in the present tense — Isaac
in the context of use you describe above, the pair of statements "I believe it's raining" and "It's raining" both have the same meaning. But why doesn't the same paradox arise for the same pair of statements in the same context in the past tense? In the past tense, the same pair of statements do not have the same meaning (as each other). — Luke
he point is that if it did happen, he would have said something true. — Snakes Alive
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