No... I ignored that locution; I thought it odd. Art has a use, it does not show a use... — Banno
Oh, yeah, all that. Except "The content of what is said is what it shows" - "content" is wrong, as shown in PI - use replaces content. — Banno
Sometimes the art shows something. Rarely is what it shows simply what it says. — Banno
You say here that the content of what is said is not what it shows, and you said that use replaces content, which seems to suggest that what is said shows use. — Janus
I'd say that good art always shows something. — Janus
I'd say that good art always shows something. In the case of music (absent lyrics) and painting, nothing is said in the literal sense of 'said' that applies to sentences. In the case of poetry I agree that what is literally said rarely, if ever, exhausts its meaning. But in the case of poetry meaning is not use at all, but association. — Janus
No; What is said is use. — Banno
I haven't thought about the distinction between showing and telling much; but to give a quick answer i would say that they are more or less synonymous in this context. — Janus
i would say that they are more or less synonymous in this context... — Janus
Consider how someone might demonstrate to you that they understood what to do at a traffic light.
They might say that they know to stop on red, go on green and dither on yellow.
Or they might take you for a drive, through sets of traffic lights, and show you that they can do as expected. — Banno
In other words, I'm currently assuming that what is show may or may not be propositional. But that what is told (via language or otherwise) is always propositional. — javra
And you arguing that belief content is a broader semantic category - I don't know what kind of things you throw in it, other than that it can be "pre-linguistic" - and so since not all of that content is even "linguistic" (presumably not all words or symbols, I don't know where you come from on this), not all of that content can be propositional; since propositions must be linguistic. — fdrake
Beliefs as mental states/dispositions with content vs beliefs as holding some statement to be true. Issues there might be: is a disposition towards a state of affairs the same as an attitude towards a statement? — fdrake
I found this point about belief being a broader semantic category to be closer to the truth. Just make an observation of one's own, if you will, ready-to-hand "belief" that the cup is on the table. The semantics, that is, the meaning, of spontaneous, unreflected passive affirmation is not explicit at all. It is in the fluid affair of grabbing the cup while reading, adjusting the light, checking the time and so forth. One can hardly call this propositional, only dispositionally propositional; and even when attention turns towards the cup which, say, spills, the "the cup is on the table and it spilled" proposition is certainly not entertained at all. The entire event is a seamless, propositionless doing. I do think we are in a cat's world of prereflective engagement. — Constance
If the purported event is representable in language and it meets the public usage criteria for an event, then it is an event.
— Andrew M
It strikes me that if there are a class of things that are "purported events", that must be "representable in language" and "meet public usage criteria" to count as events, it would then follow that those purported events do not fall under DPC despite being occurrent: — fdrake
Creative is left with the absurdity that
(1) The mouse ran behind the tree.
— Andrew M
is not a proposition. — Banno
Prelinguistic? Pragmatics is this, and most of our engagements in the world are like this. — Constance
I'd just add that each step of the process can be put into the form "Constance believes P" where P is some proposition. — Banno
A contradiction. If you dont know whether or not a event is characterized by a statement, then you can't say for sure that any event is characterized by a statement.Any event can be characterized by a statement. Whether or not it ever is, is a separate matter. — Andrew M
A disposition towards some state of affairs: this disposition presents itself as a conditional "if...then.." which is a pragmatic construction. Dispositions are anticipatory and language and logic merely formalizes this. — Constance
That's plausible, but it doesn't mean we need to recognise any mysteriously non-actual facts ("possible states of affairs" if they can't be just plain old alternative statements). — bongo fury
No mysteries here, just possibilities. — Banno
The deluded cat believed the mouse went behind the tree. — Banno
To me, that's too close to referent, to there being something that the sentence [must be aboutas a whole denotes], to reified meaning. — Banno
Was disposed to assent (upon being gifted language) to a pointing of "mouse running behind tree" at the inappropriate choice of space-time region? Cool. Apart maybe from the bit about language. So: was disposed to respond to the event as to a mouse-running-behind-tree event? — bongo fury
Or is a statement not about (at least) what its subject term refers to and (at most) what its predicate term is true or false of? — bongo fury
Convolute. — Banno
was disposed to respond to the event as to a mouse-running-behind-tree event — bongo fury
The mouse ran up the tree. The cat did not look up the tree, but behind it, and then around the base, not having seen the mouse run up the tree. The cat believed the mouse went behind the tree. — Banno
I'm not convinced that talk of dispositions is helpful. — Banno
Janus was talking about poetry; — Banno
To me, that's too close to referent, to there being something that the sentencemust be aboutas a whole denotes, to reified meaning.
— Banno — bongo fury
It isn't spelled out in what makes an utterance true, it can only be spelled out in terms of its expected effects and motivations. — fdrake
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