Hence, in so far as we can talk of our beliefs as being true or false, we must also include that their content is also capable of being true or false. — Banno
There's no insight to be gained, from the "beliefs" of babies, or the "beliefs" of cats - because they're not the same thing as an adult, human, articulated belief - with or without propositional content. 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
There's no insight to be gained, from the "beliefs" of babies, or the "beliefs" of cats — counterpunch
l You keep talking about meaning. It obscures what's going on. — Banno
...the comment about what we can know about creatures' belief when the creatures under consideration are incapable of articulating that belief via language is one worth considering though... — creativesoul
I don't think it is undeniable, nor fixed. Belief is far more fluid than that; in a state of constant flux.provides a simple undeniable true statement(all belief is meaningful to the creature forming, having, and/or holding it) that serves as standard of sorts. — creativesoul
I'm saying you're playing Sartre. — TheWillowOfDarkness
It can? I'm surprise dot see oyu defending the Humpty Dumpty view of meaning!Since any use of English could mean anything... — TheWillowOfDarkness
Again, rather out of cuff interjection. How do we know which parts of the sentence are existentially bound and which refer to particulars. The sentence could mean that one well known presently ruling king of France is bald. It could mean that such a king presently exists and is bald. Or in some point in time (prior to reading the statement), a king of France existed and was bald. In fact, it could mean that a country named France existed at some point, that country had a person acting in a particular capacity, called king, he had a condition, which for lack of a better term was named baldness, and that person had it. It seems to me that the battle for revealing propositions behind isolated sentences is obscured by linguistic inadequacy, if we are talking about ordinary language and without context that implies the intent of the author. The result is speculation. — simeonz
Actually, I failed to convey my remark. Meanwhile, I have also reviewed and revised my original position. What I meant was that the sentence, independent of when it was said, was actually ambiguous on its own terms, without knowing the particulars of the context in which it was delivered. If we tried to translate it in a formal language, such as first order predicate logic, to allow encapsulation of its meaning, the translation would be ambiguous. For example:Yes, so context matters. That sentence had an obvious use in a time when a French King existed. But it doesn't have that use now. — Andrew M
There's a great sci-fi movie called Arrival in which the protagonist gains the alien's worldview as she learns their language. — frank
.In Solaris, the protagonists deal with extraordinary events by adjusting their conceptual scheme, accepting the reality of the returning dead as a form of communication — Banno
it again last night. The premise that learning a language could somehow bestow the power to see the future struck me again as unworkably magical. — Banno
Are you denying that all belief is meaningful to the creature forming, having, and/or holding the belief? — creativesoul
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