For animals scents and sounds are signs of prey, for example, but they don't represent prey symbolically. — Janus
If something can be put into propositional form, then it is propositional? — creativesoul
The content of that belief is the mouse, the tree, themselves, spatiotemporal locations, and the correlations drawn between all those different directly perceptible things(and others undoubtedly). — creativesoul
For animals scents and sounds are signs of prey, for example, but they don't represent prey symbolically. — Janus
Indeed. The scents and sounds become significant(meaningful) as a result of becoming part of a capable creature's correlations drawn between them, possible food items(prey), their own hunger pangs, etc. Prior to becoming part of those correlations, they were not at all meaningful for the aforementioned animal. Rather, they were just sounds and scents. — creativesoul
the sounds of the word or the visible written marks are associated with the objects they (are understood to) represent. — Janus
"Drawing correlations" is not necessarily a symbolizing activity. — Janus
One thread of an argument by Herbert Hochberg runs somewhat as follows: that "white" applies to certain things does not make them white; rather "white" applies because they are white. Plausible enough but misleading. Granted, I cannot make these objects red by calling them red--by applying the term "red" to them. But on the other hand, the English language makes them white just by applying the term "white" to them; application of the term "white" is not dictated by their somehow being antecedently white, whatever that might mean. A language that applies the term "blanc" to them makes them blanc; and a language if any that applies the term "red" to them makes them red.
Some of the trouble traces back to Alfred Tarski's unfortunate suggestion that the formula " 'Snow is white' is true if and only if snow is white" commits us to a correspondence theory of truth. Actually it leaves us free to adopt any theory (correspondence, coherence, or other) that gives " 'Snow is white' is true" and "snow is white" the same truth-value.
We do understand (some) words to represent objects; that's simply a fact of human experience. — Janus
We do understand (some) words to represent objects; that's simply a fact of human experience. — Janus
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
It's not put into square form or propositional form. It is square or propositional. — Banno
We understand this not in the way we understand that the cat is on the mat, but in the way that we understand that the Bishop only ever stays on the same coloured squares. We understand not a fact, but a procedure that allows us to get on with the game. — Banno
Well you should since I'm certainly not using obscure language; it's very straightforward. I'm happy to explain anything you haven't understood in what I've said.I don't know. — Banno
Some of the trouble traces back to Alfred Tarski's unfortunate suggestion that the formula " 'Snow is white' is true if and only if snow is white" commits us to a correspondence theory of truth. Actually it leaves us free to adopt any theory (correspondence, coherence, or other) that gives " 'Snow is white' is true" and "snow is white" the same truth-value. — bongo fury
That seems to me what is incongruous in fdrake and @Constance, that in seeing reference as ready-to-hand they are mystified by its being conventional. — Banno
Those experiences are what ground the use of that language
— Andrew M
Yes, what do you mean by "ground", how does it work? — fdrake
Those perceived differences are what our talk is grounded in, i.e., they provide the context for our talk. — Andrew M
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