Visuals, sounds, smells, feelings, etc.The question then is what does such meaningful belief consist of? — creativesoul
Visuals, sounds, smells, feelings, etc. — Harry Hindu
Thinking in words is no different than thinking in visuals and sounds. — Harry Hindu
What else would there be?Yep, those too are part of it. — creativesoul
Thinking in words is no different than thinking in visuals and sounds. — Harry Hindu
If all words are visuals and sounds then you think in visuals and sounds. :roll:That is not true. All words are visuals and/or sounds. Not all visuals and sounds are words. — creativesoul
I can talk about the content of... — creativesoul
The binding of terms (not simply as referring phrases, but universals, existence claims) depends on the precise context. — simeonz
If Strawson wants to interpret claims of ordinary sentences in the intuitionistic sense, as indicated from the "neither true nor false" remark, the two statements above are not complementary, but "there exists no king of France" is still not the opposite of "exists a bald king of France" and doesn't prevent Russell from inferring (however frivolously) that there is some implicit existential quantifier in the original sentence. — simeonz
And this comes out from the fact that when, in response to his statement, we say (as we should) "There is no king of France", we should certainly not say we were contradicting the statement that the king of France is wise. We are certainly not saying that it's false. We are, rather, giving a reason for saying that the question of whether it's true or false simply doesn't arise. — On Referring, p330 - P. F. Strawson
The more realistic view seems to be that the existence of children of John's is a necessary precondition not merely of the truth of what is said, but of its being either true or false. And this suggests the possibility of interpreting all the four Aristotelian forms [A, E, I, O] on these lines: that is, as forms such that the question of whether statements exemplifying them are true or false is one that does not arise unless the subject-class has members. — Introduction to Logical Theory, p174 - P. F. Strawson
It is important to understand why people have hesitated to adopt such a view of at least some general statements. It is probably the operation of the trichotomy 'either true or false or meaningless', as applied to statements, which is to blame. For this trichotomy contains a confusion: the confusion between sentence and statement. Of course, the sentence 'All John's children are asleep' is not meaningless. It is perfectly significant. But it is senseless to ask, of the sentence, whether it is true or false. One must distinguish between what can be said about the sentence, and what can be said about the statements made, on different occasions, by the use of the sentence. It is about statements only that the question of truth or falsity can arise; and about these it can sometimes fail to arise. — Introduction to Logical Theory, p174 - P. F. Strawson
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". — simeonz
Yep, those too are part of it.
— creativesoul
What else would there be? — Harry Hindu
This sheds some light. But when do we consider a sentence truly "complete". Is the sentence's encapsulation related to us by the author? Do we realize that the author had no presuppositions by being at a vantage point that simply allows it? Better yet, is any sentence ever complete? We make statements from sentences all the time, by pivoting our reading of the author's intent as necessary.Strawson goes on further to distinguish between sentences and statements. — Andrew M
I am sorry to quote out of order. So sentences have no corresponding statement, and statements have no corresponding proposition. That is a lot of relativism. I can speculate that Strawson considers certain statements deliberately relativistic as per the author's intention? How does he know which ones, especially when, if I understood his taxonomy correctly, the sentence has no unique corresponding statement.I think Strawson is just saying that such a statement isn't propositional (due to a false presupposition), rather than interpreting in the intuitionistic sense. — Andrew M
So your beliefs are composed of actual mice, trees, cups, cupboards and tables, rather than visuals and feelings OF mice, trees, cups, cupboards and tables? Lazy thinking on your part.Mice, trees, cups, cupboards, and tables... — creativesoul
I'd previously understood the pieces in and around your quotes as a breaking of the 'crystalline purity of logic' (§ 97, 107, 108) that is embedded in the Tractatus. It's the expectation that language should be made to conform to subject-predicate form, central to the project of the Tractatus, that is being rejected. Where Wittgenstein had thought that philosophy was the revealing of the hidden logical perfection of our everyday language, he now "rotates" the angle of our examination so that common language use takes primacy. He thus expands his view of language from nothing but propositions to everything, including propositions.
You it seems would take this further in positing that we might somehow have a language (or some such) that is outside of propositional forms, that in effect cannot be put into propositional form. — Banno
The world is all that is the case, and what is the case is the existence of states of affairs/atomic facts, a proposition is a truth function of elementary propositions. — Tractatus, Wittgenstein
The general form of propositions is: This is how things are." (4.15 Tractatus)——That is the kind of proposition that one repeats to oneself countless times. One thinks that one is
tracing the outline of the thing's nature over and over again, and one is merely tracing round the frame through which we look at it.
115. A. picture held us captive. And we could not get outside it, for it lay in our language and language seemed to repeat it to us inexorably. — PI, Wittgenstein
I can talk about the content of...
— creativesoul
... a correlation?
Or is it already the content? Of a belief? Or is it the belief? — bongo fury
So your beliefs are composed of actual mice, trees, cups, cupboards and tables, rather than visuals and feelings OF mice, trees, cups, cupboards and tables? Lazy thinking on your part. — Harry Hindu
My beliefs about my cat include the cat — creativesoul
General speech acts just don't fit into it; how could flipping someone the bird be true or false? — fdrake
You use scribbles and sounds, not words. — Harry Hindu
As my old professor would ask, if you knew what needed to be the case for it to be true that fdrake flipped the bird, well.... — Banno
But that's not the important part of my reply. That's "The world is always interpreted." — Banno
And you've been trolling us with his remarks ever since.:roll: — fdrake
Why would "the world is always interpreted" imply "the world is always interpretable as a statement". — fdrake
Pretending not to understand — fdrake
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