So you must have some way to square this with "The world is all that is the case".
How? — Banno
You seem to think all beliefs are propositional, — Sam26
That seems to me the best grammar for beliefs. Their structure is a relation between someone and a proposition such that they hold the proposition to be true. — Banno
Hence any belief can be put into propositional form. Further if it cannot be put into that form it is not a belief as such, but perhaps an intuition, gut feeling, vague notion or some such. — Banno
...facts outside of language... — Sam26
Any fact can be stated. That's what a fact is, and that's what is said in Tractates 1 & 2, and I think these among the views that carried forward into his later work. — Banno
If to believe is to hold that some state of affairs is the case, then beliefs range over propositions. — Banno
I'll add that statements such as "I believe in freedom" or "I believe in Sam26" use a different sense of belief. — Banno
I would say that there are pre-linguistic facts or beliefs that give rise to language.
— Sam26
What do you mean by this? — Cobra
What I mean, and you have read other posts in here to follow my point, is that there were and are beliefs associated with pre-linguistic man that gave rise to language. Beliefs are not restricted to language. But to have a language, necessarily involves pre-linguistic beliefs, they're foundational to language. It's like the beliefs animals have. — Sam26
And what are examples of these beliefs? How can you have a belief, or claim to have one without language? — Cobra
I believe he was wrong about this. — Sam26
Beliefs can be expressed in words. What is expressed in certain acts goes beyond words, and hence beyond belief, into a form of life. — Banno
That's what was wrong with Moore's "Here is a hand" - it expressed a mere belief, a mere propositional attitude, that could indeed be subject to discussion, when what was needed was the form of life that shows us as embedded in the world. "Here is a hand" takes place in that form of life, as do all discussions. — Banno
A form of life is not a mere set of beliefs. — Banno
Searle points out that hinge propositions set out what something counts as for the purposes of the game. Moving the bishop diagonally counts as a move in chess. It sets up what it is to move the piece in the game. It rules many possible moves - putting the piece back in the box, for example - as not being moves in the game. Of course such moves might be moves in some other game or activity - tidying up.
"God exists" does not have the structure of a constitutive proposition in the requisite sense. Some interpretations might make it so.
In another discourse, they are called axioms.
An axiom, postulate, or assumption is a statement that is taken to be true, to serve as a premise or starting point for further reasoning and arguments. The word comes from the Greek ἀξίωμα (axíōma) 'that which is thought worthy or fit' or 'that which commends itself as evident'.[1][2]
The term has subtle differences in definition when used in the context of different fields of study. As defined in classic philosophy, an axiom is a statement that is so evident or well-established, that it is accepted without controversy or question.[3] As used in modern logic, an axiom is a premise or starting point for reasoning
But the use of the word ‘God’ among the religious will
likely include doubt, since God would imply faith , which requires doubt.So I think the hinge proposition God likely includes all of this. Only in a situation where the non-religious had never heard of the concept of God could there be no shared language game.
It seems that just as chess needs the rules, the board, and the pieces, in order for there to be a game of chess, so too, do we need these hinge, bedrock, or foundational beliefs (I think of them as special beliefs, not as propositions) in order to have a language, especially the language of epistemology. This includes the language of doubting. They have a special place between the mind, the world, and our language, and that place is related to our actions in the world.
What's interesting is that Wittgenstein believed that some beliefs (religious beliefs, moral beliefs, etc.) could not be expressed as facts in the world. This, it seems, is why Wittgenstein was against arguments about the existence of God, there are no facts of metaphysics ("the world is all that is the case"), no facts that correspond to metaphysical propositions. I believe he was wrong about this.
The problem with using the word "belief" is it implies the bedrock hinge statements are epistemic. It's a matter of being a part of a form of life. People don't doubt hinge propositions, they avoid playing the game by not being a part of a community.
But how does belief fit in a language game, l still need to figure this out ? — Eskander
every reasonable person doesn't take this as a given. — Eskander
Forms of life are just acts, shown in what we do. Wittgenstein is focused on those forms of life that are connected with language use, and by extension, those acts done by a society or culture. I don't know what acts would go beyond words, maybe certain mental phenomena, but I'm not sure. Wittgenstein was wrestling with this very thing at the end of his life, not only in OC, but in other writings during this period. — Sam26
Forms of life are not just acts, but acts combined with language. — Banno
That's not a criteria for being a hinge proposition.
Many a novice has been flabbergasted by castling, and nonplussed by en passant.
"Here's a hand" might be might well be disbelieved by a non-english speaker, or by yourself at a magic show.
Moving the block! — Banno
Religious people and non-religious people live in a different world. Any supposed agreement between them will be based on a new misunderstanding. — Eskander
Religious people and non-religious people live in a different world. Any supposed agreement between them will be based on a new misunderstanding. — Eskander
Axioms are self evident true statements we use for a foundation. — Eskander
Do hinge propositions have a special status ? — Eskander
Religious people and non-religious people live in a different world. Any supposed agreement between them will be based on a new misunderstanding. — Eskander
don't think of hinge-propositions as propositions in the normal sense of the word, which is why they're called hinges, basic. or bedrock propositions. They don't fall into the epistemological language we use, at least in terms of JTB. They're not truths, they don't need some kind of justification, at least in the way Moore was referring to them. They're more akin to the rules of chess, as has already been mentioned.
I can't make any sense of the idea that there are propositions that are true, but I don't know if their true, it's contradictory
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