Thats all fine, but if meaning is not simply use, but the relationship between cause and effect, then words can be used to do other things, but as an effect of ones ideas and the intent to communicate them, words can always be used to refer to, or get at, one's intent, just like any one of their behaviors. Its just that "actions speak louder than words" in that its easier to hide the reference to ones intent with words than it is with actions that dont involve words.Yes, Harry, words can be used to talk about things. But they can do much more than just refer. The problem with a purely referential theory of language such as yours is that there is so much it cannot explain. — Banno
I do not think that you understand what I'm arguing. — creativesoul
Not language, meaning. Are you paying attention?I'm not aware of any literature of language as the relationship between cause and effect, apart from your own comments.
Is there any? — Banno
No, Harry - it doesn't refer to the begging of a conversation; it is the begining of a conversation. — Banno
The orthodoxy — Banno
As per all philosophical considerations, it takes for granted that beliefs are propositional attitudes. — Banno
Banno is excellent at engaging others — creativesoul
Again, this isnt specific enough to be useful. What kind if attitudes? Attitudes of (degrees of) certainty. You keep throwing around, "truth" without properly defining what it is and how one determines some proposition is true or not except as the degree that some proposition referrs to some state-of-affairs or not. What if there are conflicting attitudes toward some proposition? How does truth resolve the conflict?The orthodoxy is that beliefs can be best discussed as propositional attitudes. — Banno
My attitude toward this proposition: :rofl:Banno is excellent at engaging others — creativesoul
...It does seem to me you are obsessing over a minor point. If I were to say that I am choosing to use the term "belief" only for those things that can be put into the form of propositional attitudes, would you object? I doubt it. And yet here we are. — Banno
Banno is excellent at engaging others
— creativesoul
My attitude toward this proposition: :rofl: — Harry Hindu
What kind if attitudes? — Harry Hindu
You keep throwing around, "truth" without properly defining what it is and how one determines some proposition is true or not except as the degree that some proposition referrs to some state-of-affairs or not. — Harry Hindu
"P" is true if and only if P
You are a new Darwin for the epistemologists.There wasn't any literature on the evolution of organisms by natural selection until Darwin wrote it. — Harry Hindu
Use refers to intent. — Harry Hindu
How can a language less creature, say a prehistoric mammal, have an attitude towards a proposition when propositions themselves are language constructs? The failure of what you argue is shown in it's inherent inability to make much sense of such language less belief. — creativesoul
Again?
So a belief is a something stored in the mind of a Diplodocus? — Banno
Diplodocus did not have items of furniture in their minds that could be properly described as beliefs. Rather they had behaviours that we can set out and explain in terms of beliefs and desires. — Banno
Always Skinner with this one. — ZzzoneiroCosm
What do you bloody well expect? The Skinner accusation against Witti is pathetic, a lost caise and a waste of time. — Banno
Languageless creatures have languageless beliefs in the form of thought-patterns and emotional patterns that motivate behavior.
(Call it furniture if you want.)
What's the controversy? — ZzzoneiroCosm
What's the controversy? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Care to further discuss the topic, as compared/contrasted to my interlocutor? — creativesoul
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