Whereas to claim that nonlinguistic beliefs can occur is to claim the relevance of nonlinguistic givens. — javra
Do you take issue with this (to my mind non-controversial) position? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Languageless creatures have languageless beliefs in the form of thought-patterns and emotional patterns that motivate behavior.
We only need to assume languageless creatures have thoughts and emotions and that these thoughts and emotions have the power to motivate behavior.
I don't see why it needs to be more complicated than that. — ZzzoneiroCosm
the problem is one of other minds; in this case where we linguistic ones refuse to grant nonlinguistic beings any relevance. — javra
So it's controversial to Wittgensteinians because it doesn't accord with a philosophical preference for language-centered epistemologies, cosmologies, etc? — ZzzoneiroCosm
What do you bloody well expect? The Skinner accusation against Witti is pathetic, a lost cause and a waste of time. — Banno
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
There's plenty of scholarly writing on the link between Wittenstein and Skinner. — ZzzoneiroCosm
So it's controversial to Wittgensteinians because it doesn't accord with a philosophical preference for language-centered epistemologies, cosmologies, etc? — ZzzoneiroCosm
And plenty arguing that Wittgenstein was not a behaviorist. — Joshs
I believe it nullifies the importance of the beetle in a box argument - for, in this argument, if it isn’t linguistic it is irrelevant. Whereas to claim that nonlinguistic beliefs can occur is to claim the relevance of nonlinguistic givens. The two appear to stand in direct contradiction. — javra
By this he didn’t mean animals didnt think, but that their social behavior constituted language games we couldn’t relate to. — Joshs
The beetle in a box argument isnt about verbal language, it’s about social behavior, and a rejection of the idea that any meaning can be intrinsic (like qualia). — Joshs
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.
I dunno. This seems to be a fairly straight forward corollary of the beetle in the box. That folk with a decent grasp of Wittgenstein - yes, you , creativesoul - can't see this strikes me as quite odd. — Banno
...how do you see the relation between concepts and beliefs? — neomac
Care to further discuss the topic, as compared/contrasted to my interlocutor?
— creativesoul
I don't see how we can further it. — neomac
We only need to assume languageless creatures have thoughts and emotions and that these thoughts and emotions have the power to motivate behavior. — ZzzoneiroCosm
For background, what is your stance on the proposition that lesser animals do not convey propositions? — javra
Does the beetle in the box argument affirm that my honestly saying “I am in pain” has a relevant referent? Such that, though you might not instantly discern what it is, it is nevertheless that which I intend to refer to via the sigh of “my pain”. Last I read it affirms the opposite, that whether or not there is a referent to this phrase is irrelevant. Meaning being strictly attached to the abstractions of language rather than to intents, which are intrinsic. — javra
I believe that it's better to arrive at that as a conclusion that is warranted by and follows from what we can know about our own thought and belief. — creativesoul
If I claim that I am referring to something intrinsic by saying that I am in pain, what I mean is that there is a simple and direct relation between my words and a sensation. Wittgenstein argues that such an isolated association between word and thing doesn’t say anything at all, it is meaningless. In order for the expression ‘ I am in pain’ to mean something to others,, it has to refer to a socially shared context of background presuppositions, and do something new with them that is recognizable to other speakers. If I am alone, and I think to myself ‘I am in pain’, then the thought is only meaningful to me if it refers to my own network of background presuppositions and carries them forward into a new context of sense. — Joshs
Seems to me you missed something quite important, but...
Try this:
You are perhaps happy to say that red is seen by us in, say, a sunset or a cup, but that it is a secondary property; not to actually be found in the object.
I'm suggesting something analogous is the case with belief. — Banno
What is the referent of the belief in "the cat believes the bowl is empty"? — Banno
What sort of thing is the belief? — Banno
You say it's not a thing in the mind of the cat. So what is it? — Banno
The question makes no sense on my view. — creativesoul
. All belief consists of correlations — creativesoul
If the cat believes that the bowl is empty, it is as a result of looking and seeing that there was no food in it. There is no referent of the belief. As above, the cat's belief does not refer to anything. Rather, it's about a food source. It's about the bowl,, but is much more than just the empty bowl. — creativesoul
We build red out of our usage. Why shouldn't we think of belief in much the same way? — Banno
...what is it that is "had" by the cat, when it has a belief? Nothing, I say; it's just a way of setting out it's behaviour. — Banno
We build red out of our usage. Why shouldn't we think of belief in much the same way? — Banno
"I have something in mind" does not mean that the mind is a place where things can be. Indeed, beliefs are the sorts of things that do not have a precise spatiotemporal location — creativesoul
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