Belief is far more fluid than that; in a state of constant flux. — Banno
Maybe the first translation to predicate logic would satisfy your objections (edit: because existence is not entailed by it, just material implication in case of actual existence). I am not sure. — simeonz
P. F. Strawson argued that Russell had failed to correctly represent what one means when one says a sentence in the form of "the current Emperor of Kentucky is gray." According to Strawson, this sentence is not contradicted by "No one is the current Emperor of Kentucky", for the former sentence contains not an existential assertion, but attempts to use "the current Emperor of Kentucky" as a referring (or denoting) phrase. Since there is no current Emperor of Kentucky, the phrase fails to refer to anything, and so the sentence is neither true nor false. — Criticism of Russell's analysis - P.F.Strawson
Obviously, I could invent context that indicates such meaning. But altogether, my point was that our everyday language does not produce encapsulated sentences with individual semantics, a la mathematical logic. We could only guess what the most probable meaning was as we anticipate the surrounding context. — simeonz
The question may have been about soundness vs validity in ordinary language and I may have misunderstood. About whether ordinary sentences require actual application to be considered meaningful or can they have vacuously correct meaning. — simeonz
drawing correlations between things — creativesoul
Ok, so drawing of correlations between things is formation of dispositions to respond to them which are relative to each other? Maybe? — bongo fury
Actually, if Russell meant something more akin toYes, my translation would just be the first. The background to my original comment was Russell's analysis of definite descriptions and Strawson's criticism of it:
P. F. Strawson argued that Russell had failed to correctly represent what one means when one says a sentence in the form of "the current Emperor of Kentucky is gray." According to Strawson, this sentence is not contradicted by "No one is the current Emperor of Kentucky", for the former sentence contains not an existential assertion, but attempts to use "the current Emperor of Kentucky" as a referring (or denoting) phrase. Since there is no current Emperor of Kentucky, the phrase fails to refer to anything, and so the sentence is neither true nor false. — Criticism of Russell's analysis - P.F.Strawson — Andrew M
Exists P (KingOfFrance(P, Now) and Bald(P, Now))
ForAll P (KingOfFrance(P, Now) implies not Bald(P, Now))
Fair enough. This makes an interesting point that mathematical and ordinary language have different objectives, which result in different kinds of senses of the word "useful".So my view here is that ordinary sentences require actual application to be true (or false). The issue is not so much one of meaningfulness (i.e., we know what the sentence means, as your spaceship example shows) as one of usefulness (i.e., if the sentence is non-referring, it doesn't have a use). My view is similar for so-called vacuous truths - they also fail to refer to anything and so are also neither true nor false. — Andrew M
drawing correlations between things
— creativesoul
Ok, so drawing of correlations between things is formation of dispositions to respond to them which are relative to each other? Maybe?
— bongo fury
Or is it only another way of saying having beliefs?
Which are irreducible mental stuff? — bongo fury
Are you denying that all belief is meaningful to the creature forming, having, and/or holding the belief?
— creativesoul
Do you have issues making sense of the above? — creativesoul
What does it do? Paraphrase it in terms of use. — Banno
Try this:, talk of meaning here is revving the engine without engaging the clutch. — Banno
Left unexplained is how drawing a correlation is not propositional. — Banno
Did I assent to "All belief is meaningful"? Must have been a moment of weakness. — Banno
I'm having trouble understanding how talk of language use is relevant to the content of language-less belief, — creativesoul
The general form of a correlation: P(x,y) — Banno
I'm not going to allow you to continue conflating our account of another's belief with the others belief. — creativesoul
No. You use scribbles and sounds, not words. Using scribbles and sounds to point to things makes those scribbles and sounds words, and not just merely scribbles and sounds.Use your words. — Banno
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