You described metacognition. That is thinking about one's own thought and belief. — creativesoul
The proposition is sometimes said to 'sit well' with the individual's other beliefs whenever there is no readily apparent disagreement between the proposition and the individual's worldview. — creativesoul
The notion of a level of interpretation that is not linguistic is counterintuitive. — Banno
Well, okay then creativesoul - good talk. Maybe give my approach a little more thought and get back to me if you wish to discuss it. I "believe" it's right, and largely for the reasons you state:
The proposition is sometimes said to 'sit well' with the individual's other beliefs whenever there is no readily apparent disagreement between the proposition and the individual's worldview. — counterpunch
the proposition is always...
"I am right that..." — counterpunch
No, it's not. — creativesoul
I'm imagining one who is first learning how to use names such as "mouse" and "tree" to pick mice and trees out of the world to the exclusion of all else. — creativesoul
Thanks for your efforts. That's an excellent reply. — Banno
The "claim" is nothing but the commonplace that when what we say is true, it sets out how things are. I have difficulty in seeing how you might maintain that the world is interpreted and yet treat this interpretation as tacit; especially if that tacit interpretation is thought of as not being capable of interpretation in propositional form.
The notion of a level of interpretation that is not linguistic is counterintuitive.
I gather the notion is that the world is already divided into cups and tables before these are spoken of; (the before here being a logical, not a temporal, priority? I understand time plays an odd role in Heidegger's metaphysics...)
103. The ideal, as we think of it, is unshakable. You can never get outside it; you must always turn back. There is no outside; outside you cannot breathe.—Where does this idea come from? It is like a pair of glasses on our nose through which we see whatever we look at. It never occurs to us to take them off.
104. We predicate of the thing what lies in the method of representing it. Impressed by the possibility of a comparison, we think we are perceiving a state of affairs of the highest generality.
Impressed by the possibility of a comparison, we think we are perceiving a state of affairs of the highest generality.
Well, if it is not propositional, what is it? What other form could it have?
And even if there is some alternative form, that form must be capable of interpretation in propositional form.
I suggest that belief is belief about the self. — counterpunch
That is, on Russell's view (and yours) the sentence entails that there is a present King of France. The entailment is false, therefore the sentence is false. — Andrew M
A hypothesis. — simeonz
If the purpose of this debate is to decide if the content of belief is propositional, how can we possibly examine that question in organisms incapable of articulating a belief? — counterpunch
So they probably hope the use-mention distinction is at least half-way not about pointing.
— bongo fury
Then what do they think use is doing, if not pointing? — frank
All I need is the movie to demonstrate that it's conceivable that there are aspects of the world that can't be pointed to by a sentence of English. — frank
If this were so, we would have no way to claim these were "aspects of the world"; as if you could show something and yet not be able to point to it. — Banno
Either way, depends on how fundamental the question wants to be. On whether the debate assumes a point of reference of "human beliefs as commonly practiced presently". For me at least, acknowledging the limitations of the discussion is still a result.We cannot discuss with the chimp what it believed, or how it formed that belief, or in what terms it would express it. In terms of the question, "the content of belief is propositional" - we are no further along. — counterpunch
You need to prove that everything can be pointed to with a sentence of English because it's conceivable that our cognition is limited so that there are things that can't be. — frank
What happens is that stuff outside our reckoning is brought inside it by extending the language. — Banno
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