Do either of you see a tension between "most of our engagements with the world are (prelinguistic)" and "I agree, and those engagements target statements"? — fdrake
...what are you counting as language? — bongo fury
My purpose there was to distinguish them in a dependency sense. First-order beliefs are about the world. Second-order beliefs are about statements about the world. — Andrew M
OK, so consider the scenario where a cat watched a mouse run behind a tree and then chased after it.
That the cat chased after the mouse suggests that the cat believed that the mouse ran behind the tree.
If we agree about that, then the question is what to make of the that-clause "the mouse ran behind the tree". I think we would agree that it describes an event that occurred independently of the cat's belief, and also independently of language.
Now I think that is what you mean by language-less belief. And also that this characterizes much of human belief as well. Is that correct? — Andrew M
Naming and descriptive practices. — creativesoul
a creature capable of attributing meaning — creativesoul
This is about metavalue, which I wont' go into unless you want to, but I say it moves the discussion to value because the content is, of course, not discussable. Presence qua presence cannot be spoken, and if the understanding is all about pragmatics, what we call reality, truth and the rest is really ready-to-hand instrumentality of Being in the world. — Constance
Naming and descriptive practices.
— creativesoul
Cool. And,
a creature capable of attributing meaning
— creativesoul
might do so by other means or in other ways than are implied by such practices? — bongo fury
If there is some state of affairs, then there can potentially be a statement that picks out that state of affairs. Symbolically, x and "x" pick out the same x.
— Andrew M
So, is the second sentence a typo, or deliberate sophistry? Which the otherwise unacountable banality of the first sentence is designed to camouflage?
Or have you convinced even yourself that the picker-outer is properly identified with the picked-out? — bongo fury
Yes. Some language-less creatures are capable of attributing meaning. — creativesoul
It's worse than I thought, if "x" isn't even abbreviating "x is true". — bongo fury
It seems natural that we attribute beliefs to animals and small children, despite their lack of language. — Banno
Drawing correlations between different directly perceptible things, none of which are language use. — creativesoul
What would count as a misattribution of belief as compared/contrasted to correctly attributing belief to such language-less creatures? — creativesoul
Smart phones ? — bongo fury
The notion to be avoided is that different statements can say the same thing, and that hence there is a thing called the proposition, which is what the statement means. — Banno
Drawing correlations between different directly perceptible things, none of which are language use.
— creativesoul
Example? — bongo fury
(Scratch that. I see now you want misattributed not mistaken.) — bongo fury
Drawing correlations between different directly perceptible things, none of which are language use.
— creativesoul
Example?
— bongo fury
Mice, trees, spatial relations between mice, trees, and the creature themselves... — creativesoul
Smart phones do not attribute meaning. — creativesoul
An artificial neural network can have the nameless anticipation (surge in action potentials). Oughtn't we reserve "belief" for the anticipations of a more restricted class of machines?
I suggest: those very much future machines skilled not merely in the chasing of mice, but in the chasing of the imaginary trajectories of the pointings of mouse-words and mouse-pictures. A skill which is ascribable literally to humans from infancy. Only anthropomorphically to cats and present-day robots.
That's too restrictive for people who are sure cats literally have beliefs, of course. They must exclude robots some other way. If at all. — bongo fury
an example of how — bongo fury
an example of how
— bongo fury
This makes no sense.
The how part is autonomous. It requires certain biological machinery, etc. It just happens(at first anyway)... the drawing correlations, I mean. — creativesoul
disposed to respond to the event as to a mouse-running-behind-tree event? — bongo fury
How am I to think of a cat as drawing correlations? — bongo fury
If we're using terms in the same way, I don't think it's surprising that "presence qua presence cannot be spoken", words aren't identical to the things they stand in for after all. When we make an assertion, a whole process of interaction has lead to the uttered statement. "This rose is red", what are the boundaries of the rose? How many thorns does it have? How many petals? What is its hue? How reflective is it? How tall? A condensation of the rose's constitutive patterns occurs when using words to stand in for them; what counts as a rose, what counts as red, and what is irrelevant for both instances of counting as. — fdrake
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