I have not claimed that beliefs are in the mind.
— creativesoul
?
I didn’t say you did. I said you try to dismantle that. — khaled
So if belief was a movie, the protagonist's having an attitude toward a proposition is just one scene. — frank
"But what is a bird?" he asks, "If not a deadening label for the endless mystery of rustling and flashes of light amidst the humid aroma of moss and dirt? — frank
Do be careful with computational logic. It doesn't work the same as propositional logic, because instructions are not statements. "A= A+1" Contradiction as statement, simple commonplace instruction. — unenlightened
Eg, I grasp the cup; my body and mind are directed towards the cup in a specific way, to grasp it, to reach for its handle, to lift to to my mouth etc. This state is directed towards the cup. The content will include the location of its handle, the type of liquid in the cup, that the cup is to be grasped for drinking and so on. SEP characterises intentionality as: — fdrake
One's intention is shown in one's acts — Sam26
Ya, I think we agree. — Sam26
Would you agree that it shows that whatever the intentional content of belief is, because it is expressed (perhaps with some transformation/mutilation) through assertions it forms part of the content of assertions? But remains distinct from the content of the assertions? — fdrake
Yes, which is why, if I understand your point, I believe that although language expresses one's belief, it's not a necessary component of that belief. — Sam26
I think we're close then. I didn't want to say language in general was a distinct phenomenon from belief's content; I think there are good reasons to suspect that language use informs what we believe and how we believe it; but that declarative sentence content was a distinct phenomenon from belief's content. — fdrake
Either way, arguing about the trivial illustrative example I offered is irrelevant. — unenlightened
I think we're close too. — Sam26
I only want to say that there are certain base or foundational beliefs that arise quite apart from language content.
However, there is no doubt that language plays an important role in how and what we believe.
We use language to expand our beliefs, so I don't want to say that language in general is separate and distinct from all beliefs.
For example, what about declarative sentences that arise as we expand our beliefs using language?
An example might be that a doctor's trained eye can look for abnormalities in an x-ray scan, the intentional state is abnormality seeking, Asserting "This is an abnormality" would be derivative of finding an abnormality. What I'm trying to highlight is that the content * of the abnormality finding state is expressed somehow in "This is an abnormality", it would also be expressed in whatever description of the abnormality occurred. — fdrake
What are you trying to accomplish when using the logic of propositions vs. the logic of commands? Do both not express some sort if belief?Do either of you dispute my claim that the logic of propositions is not the same as the logic of commands? — unenlightened
but then it wouldn't be a contradiction, like they claimed.The assumption that he meant A to have some numerical value appears reasonable. Null pointer errors aren't very relevant to the discussion. — Kenosha Kid
Do you see this as different from what I've expressed in other threads about beliefs states, say the act of opening a door, shows your beliefs about doors, expressed or not? — Sam26
Someone else might express "This is an abnormality," as you exhibit the "abnormality finding state." Or, someone else might say he believes X, by observing some intentional act or another. This it seems to me (your e.g. as well as mine) shows that the belief is quite separate from the expression. — Sam26
but then it wouldn't be a contradiction, like they claimed. — Harry Hindu
So what? Different languages have different rules for the same symbols. We can still translate the meaning and end up saying the same thing in different ways. — Harry Hindu
So, unenlightened hasn't shown us any meaningful distinction when talking about what symbols and rules can be used to refer to, or express beliefs. — Harry Hindu
Perhaps you can muster a better one? — Kenosha Kid
That sounds right to me. I have the sneaking suspicion that we disagree a lot on some nearby issues, but it's hidden by how you've used the words "separate" and "expression". — fdrake
To a first approximation, let's imagine what a speech act expresses as a kind of inverse of interpretation. Call the process by which (speech) acts are mapped by people* to interpretations "interpretation". Expression's then the process by which interpretations are mapped by people to speech acts. — fdrake
Interpretation takes an act and gives it an interpretation. Expression takes an interpretation and puts it in a speech act. — fdrake
In that view, if we look at the assertion "It is raining but I do not believe it is raining", the performative contradiction in it can be explained with: assertions of fact (speech acts) express that their asserters believe what they say is so. The intentional content of belief expressed in "It is raining" is * that it's raining, which is contrary to what is expressed by the latter part of the phrase; another assertion of a fact, that the asserter does not believe it is raining. — fdrake
"It is raining..."->(the asserter believes that it is raining), the -> is expression/showing. — fdrake
I'd have it that because speech acts can (and indeed routinely) express intentional content in that manner, they should be considered as part of what speech acts mean. — fdrake
And in the context of the bone I picked with Banno, I was trying to expand declarative sentence content (what they express) to include the intentional content of the speech acts which assert them, which I imagine goes against the grain of taking belief's content to be an assertion. Butchering it a bit for clarity: assertion's content is a belief vs belief's content is an assertion. — fdrake
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