So you're arguing for semantic holism?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 tao that can be told
is not the eternal Tao
The name that can be named
is not the eternal Name.
The unnamable is the eternally real.
Naming is the origin
of all particular things. — Lao Tzu
When put that way, what was the gist of the motivation for the debate about whether beilef is propositional or not?The tao that can be told
is not the eternal Tao
/.../
You better believe it! — unenlightened
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
So you're arguing for semantic holism? — baker
...what was the gist of the motivation for the debate about whether beilef is propositional or not? — baker
...what was the gist of the motivation for the debate about whether beilef is propositional or not? — baker
...what was the gist of the motivation for the debate about whether beilef is propositional or not? — baker
I got the feeling that it was about whether belief in God (and other religious claims) is justified. — baker
Misattribution. This is important.
We might all agree that having a belief is not like having something in one's pocket. — Banno
...states of affairs are shaped like propositions. — Banno
...our common stock of words embodies all the distinctions men have found worth drawing, and the connexions they have found worth marking, in the lifetimes of many generations: these surely are likely to be more numerous, more sound, since they have stood up to the long test of the survival of the fittest, and more subtle, it least in all ordinary and reasonably practical matters, than any that you or I are likely to think up in our arm-chairs of an afternoon-the most favoured alternative method.
This holds true for religious belief as well.I'm arguing that all belief is meaningful to the creature forming, having, and/or holding the belief; that all belief consists of correlations drawn between different things; that some language-less creatures have belief; that not all belief is propositional in content; that all our accounting practices of an other's belief(and our own) are propositional in form. — creativesoul
Banno's deflationary view doesn't match the sentence with some worldly fact, — fdrake
The interesting thing is that a proposition will be true exactly when the state of affairs to which it applies is indeed the case. — Banno
We need a general relation between an individual and a possible state of affairs, to use when someone is wrong as to the truth. — Banno
Symbolically, x and "x" pick out the same x. — Andrew M
The stuff on the right hand side is in unmediated contact with the world;
— Banno — bongo fury
What do you think we are pretending then? We are not pretending that (some) words (sounds and groups of visual symbols) are associated with objects by us. — Janus
the sound of the word or the visible written marks are associated with the objects they (are understood to [i.e. pretended to]) represent. — Janus
It's obvious — Janus
Like the weather or a carburettor, the neural collective is actually pushing and shoving against the real world.
That then is the semantics that breathes life into the syntax.
— apokrisis — bongo fury
Are you sure it's obvious to a bio-semiotician? You know, signs as allegedly so different from symbols? — bongo fury
Well... it can be hard to tell: — bongo fury
On the way here we passed by the relation between words and the world; Constance pointed to the "seamless, propositionless doing" of our everyday encounters with the world. @fdrake followed through on this. There is a way of understanding a rule that is not set out in more rules, but rather is shown in how we enact the rule. There is a way of understanding that "Snow is white" is true that is not only set out in the T-sentence '"Snow is white" is true only if snow is white', but understood in making snowballs, watching the drifting specks, shovelling the pathway. This is not said, but shown. That does not render it unsayable - after all, Constance, fdrake and I have indeed been saying it. The T-sentence sets out the very equivalence between word and world, but to see this, like the duck-rabbit, one has to be able to look at the T-sentence in two ways; what it says is a truth functional equivalence of two sets of words; what it shows is the relation between words and the world. Picture a T-sentence in which the equivalence is between '"Snow is white" is true' and white snow. — Banno
I think Peirce's distinctions between signs, ikons and symbols make good sense. — Janus
The debate between you and creative just comes down to how we want to define belief. We can define it any way we like, obviously. — frank
Your sticking point has to do with some equivalence of word and world. Since words are commonly put together to say untrue things, there can't be any equivalence. — frank
This, and your comment re modality, leads me to think that you haven't grokked the logic of a t-sentence. IF the LHS of a T-sentence is false, and the T-sentence is true, the RHS will also be false. — Banno
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