This is the point I made, which Banno scoffed at. Allowing that a system of beliefs may be imperfect means that the entire system needs to be subjected to doubt. This is proof that the idea of hinge propositions, which it is unreasonable to doubt, is fundamentally flawed. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why "existence" is a disputed and unclear concept. — Metaphysician Undercover
The proposed hinge propositions are subject matter, content, and therefore need to be doubted — Metaphysician Undercover
Why not doubt then this need for subjecting the system to doubt? — j0e
Instead the system is a big, baggy monster of ways that people do things, things that people 'know,' without having to think about it. — j0e
Why must hinge propositions be doubted? To what extra-systematic authority do you appeal? This 'system' is not intended as some philosopher's pet system but as something like a shared system of meanings and taken-for-granted quasi-facts. — j0e
Why must hinge propositions be doubted? — j0e
I say 'quasi-facts' because worldviews change. — j0e
IMO, all concepts are more or less disputed and more or less unclear. — j0e
However, the problem remains that there can be any number of internally logically coherent language games, and the sceptic may rightly ask for justification why a particular language game corresponds to an external reality. — RussellA
we cannot say that the hinge propositions of any particular language game are beyond doubt. — Metaphysician Undercover
we cannot say that the hinge propositions of any particular language game are beyond doubt.
— Metaphysician Undercover
I agree - as Grayling wrote in section III "As OC stands, it stands defeated" — RussellA
some hinges are not only doubted, they are rejected as false — Fooloso4
IE, even if language games change, the hinge propositions within them remain true in an analytic rather than synthetic sense and therefore cannot be rejected as false. — RussellA
As I see it, hinge propositions are inventions and therefore knowable without reference to the world. They are true by definition and therefore exempt from doubt. — RussellA
Suppose language game A including the hinge proposition "the earth existed before I was born" was replaced at a later time by language game B including the hinge proposition ""the earth did not exist before I was born". As hinge propositions are true by definition, true without reference to the world and exempt from doubt, the previous hinge proposition "the earth existed before I was born" remains true. — RussellA
He is creating some propositions to be exempt from doubt, rather than in looking at the world he has discovered some propositions that are exempt from doubt. — RussellA
IE, "hinge propositions" are part of the logical form of the system and not part of the content. — RussellA
A common mistake that is made, I see it here frequently, is to assume that hinges are all of a kind. — Fooloso4
A belief system must be coherent to fulfill the conditions of being a "system". This means that if one belief within the system is dubious, then the entire system is dubious due to all the beliefs being related through coherency. So it makes no sense to say that some beliefs within the system are dubious but the foundational ones, hinge propositions cannot be doubted. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am arguing that the concept of hinge propositions which are beyond doubt is itself incoherent. So my point is not that hinge propositions ought to be doubted, but that there is no such thing as hinge propositions. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you allow that worldviews change, then how can you subscribe to hinge propositions which are beyond doubt? — Metaphysician Undercover
Hinge propositions cannot be questioned within a language game - that's what they are. In order to doubt them we must change the way the game works - change the nature of the game itself. — Banno
Meta (in so far as he can be understood) apparently accepts a referential theory of meaning - the meaning of a word is the thing it names. After the Linguistic Turn, vey few philosophers would accept this. But that view has the result that Meta thinks a proposition can be compared to the world directly; that is, without considering how the proposition fits in to what we are doing with the words in which it occurs. So it is not the individual hinge proposition that can be doubted, but the entire game. Compare this to Quine's epistemology. So I think your critique of Meta hits the mark. — Banno
Well, in my defence, I do find you verging on the incomprehensible. — Banno
Meta does not see that he is writing nonsense. — Banno
A little more on this. I think the concept of 'hinge propositions' has a certain utility. As we use the sign 'hinge propositions,' its fuzzy public meaning will float and drift like a cloud. This semantic drift seems to be slow enough so that we can understand one another well enough to keep the conversation going. (Now we can say the same thing about 'semantic drift' and so on. We all depend on our ('blind') skill of navigating the rapids of language. ) — j0e
I think there is a problem with accepting a proposition or a premise on the basis of its utility, when it is known to be a falsity. — Metaphysician Undercover
[T]he most basic linguistic know–how is not mastery of proprieties of use that can be expressed once and for all in a fixed set of rules, but the capacity to stay afloat and find and make one’s way on the surface of the raging white–water river of discursive communal practice that we always find ourselves having been thrown into... — Brandom
However, the problem remains that there can be any number of internally logically coherent language games, and the sceptic may rightly ask for justification why a particular language game corresponds to an external reality.
IE, "hinge propositions" are part of the logical form of the system and not part of the content. — RussellA
Would you say that the word 'proposition' is being used in this thread the same way Witt used it? — frank
So Witt wasn't talking about speech acts. He was talking about something in the range of things discussed in that SEP article. — frank
A key passage in OC is a quote from Goethe's Faust:
"In the beginning was the deed." (OC 402)
This is expanded upon:
"But that means I want to conceive it as something that lies beyond being justified or
unjustified; as it were, as something animal." (OC 359)
"I want to regard man here as an animal; as a primitive being to which one grants instinct but
not ratiocination. As a creature in a primitive state. Any logic good enough for a primitive means of
communication needs no apology from us. Language did not emerge from some kind of
ratiocination. " (OC 475)
Language games are an extension of man's acting in the world. Primitive hinges are pre-linguistic. They are not language games, they are an essential part of the form of life in which language games come to play a part. It is not that they cannot be doubted, it is simply that they are not. — Fooloso4
A mistake that is frequently made is to treat hinges as if they are all the same. There are propositional hinges and pre-linguistic hinges. Empirical hinges and mathematical hinges. — Fooloso4
literal description rather than a metaphor. — Metaphysician Undercover
incommensurability of language games — Banno
Language game is a metaphor for having rules, and rules are needed in order to cope with the raging white-water confusion of the world. People literally need some kind of bedrock, some set of working assumptions, axioms, rules, hinge propositions, etc. — RussellA
"I want to regard man here as an animal; as a primitive being to which one grants instinct but not ratiocination. As a creature in a primitive state. Any logic good enough for a primitive means of communication needs no apology from us. Language did not emerge from some kind of ratiocination. " — Fooloso4
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