What would count as a misattribution of belief as compared/contrasted to correctly attributing belief to such language-less creatures? — creativesoul
drawing correlations between different directly perceptible things — creativesoul
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
To say that "x" and x pick out the same thing is quite different than saying "x" is true iff x, the equivalence between the x on the left and the x on the right occurs only after the rose has been counted as red and counted as a rose; that is to say after it has been picked out. A whole regime of phenomena; of representation, of perceptual exploration of the environment, of how word is tailored to world; is hidden if the x on the right is treated as an uninterpreted event in the world. The perspective, norms, use of language, go into x, that is why it can be matched redundantly with "x" being true. In other words, that x on the right is theory ladened, and the theory it is ladened with is set up by how the statement counts as the state of affairs. — fdrake
Which provides a problem, if how "x" counts as x is internal to norms of discourse - it is indeed part of their execution -, those discursive norms must be taken as a given in order for disquotation to spell out the sense of a declarative sentences. ""x" and x pick out the same thing" works as an account of the sense of "x" only insofar as the means by which they do pick out the same thing is taken for granted. For declarative sentences, this is all buried in truth; truth as direct but interpreted contact between what the sentence is and what it picks out. That burial is also an inversion; what counts as an event becomes the substrate of the declarative sentence, rather than the speech act of its assertion containing within it a generation of what counts as what in interaction with an event. Displacing the generative component of the speech act's content with the norms by which the speech is judged by that generative content. This is an intellectual magic trick; a conjuring of the given by which the relationship between "x" and x is judged as a redundancy. In reality, that relationship is a generative process of interaction, and the conformability between "x" and x can be seen, retrospectively, as its output. — fdrake
A name is not a description. Nor does a name refer only in virtue of its somehow being the same as a description. — Banno
T-sentences do not claim that the thing on the left is the very same as the thing on the right. The equivalence is one of truth-function, not of identity. Any interpretation that applies to the proposition on the left also applies to the state of affairs on the right. Hence, they cancel out, like paired variables in any equation. — Banno
"Standing in" is a reference to the quote: "Words don't stand for things, they stand in for them". Meaning roughly language functions in the absence of the things it is concerned with, and it must be this way. — fdrake
Wasn't talking about names as definite descriptions. — fdrake
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
What thingly qualities are implicitly brought to bear in the calling of X a thing? — Constance
in the execution of x, the passive observation, and "there is a rabbit" is uttered, truth only comes into play after the fact because it is in this afterward that truth, the functional concept's context comes into play. Until one utters the term explicitly, truth is merely a standby notion, along with a cluster of other rabbit and non rabbit notions that implicitly attend, ready to hand. — Constance
What would count as a misattribution of belief as compared/contrasted to correctly attributing belief to such language-less creatures?
— creativesoul
Ah, not a bad question.
One would suppose that misattribution would be the same for animals and people. — Banno
Can there be a correlation drawn that cannot be put into propositional form?
A language-less creature, such as a cat, can form such beliefs about such events. — creativesoul
In order to know whether or not that account is false, we must first know what the other's belief is... — creativesoul
One believes a mouse ran behind the tree if one draws correlations between the spatiotemporal locations of itself, the mouse, and the tree... — creativesoul
Peirce — Janus
But there just is no fact of the matter whether a word or picture is pointed at one thing or another. No physical bolt of energy flows from pointer to pointee(s). So the whole social game is one of pretence.
— bongo fury
Unless you're a biosemiotician? :chin: — bongo fury
When we make the assertion that the rose is red we somehow invoke a "condensation of the rose's constitutive patterns"...? — Banno
I must need more coffee, because I can't make sense of this. What are the things language is concerned with? It is concerned with the stuff around us every day. I don't see how it could be said to function in their absence. — Banno
You might want to call it a causal relationship... — fdrake
We might all agree that having a belief is not like having something in one's pocket. — Banno
I've certainly never claimed that having belief is equivalent to having something in one's pocket. I'm left wondering what the point of that post was??? — creativesoul
One believes a mouse ran behind the tree if one draws correlations between the spatiotemporal locations of itself, the mouse, and the tree...
— creativesoul
...which can be put into propositional form; hence, all belief is propositional. — Banno
think "frank" does not refer to you in the way a marble causes another to move; I'm not sure how that could work. I think we are using the word "frank" to refer to you. — Banno
But what has this to do with belief? — Banno
That's exactly what you are doing in supposing that the belief of you mouse is some sort of correlation going on in its head. — Banno
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