The cat cannot hold an accounting practice to be true, for it cannot understand such practices, and in order to hold something as true, one must first understand what's being held so. — creativesoul
This may seem to be splitting hairs, but it is imperative to do so for that distinction both honors and subsequently bridges the gap between belief and thinking about belief, whereas the latter requires language use, and is necessary for holding something to be true. — creativesoul
We don't know what goes on in the mind of languageless creatures. They won't tell. :) — ZzzoneiroCosm
If by "holding a belief" you mean having the psychical capacity to think about one's beliefs, sure, then probably a cat doesn't hold beliefs. — ZzzoneiroCosm
There is an actual distinction to be drawn and maintained between holding something as true and holding a belief, for they are not always the same, even though some beliefs are held to be true. — creativesoul
When I say the cat believes the sound of the electric can opener means there might be something tasty in the kitchen I mean the cat has made an association between the sound and the treat. I don't mean the cat is able to think about its beliefs. — ZzzoneiroCosm
How does this make it impossible for us to glean knowledge about language less belief? — creativesoul
I've no issue with saying that cats can have and hold beliefs about what's happened, is happening, or is about to happen. — creativesoul
I'm still struggling to understand how the cat holds the meaning to be true. — creativesoul
Can you exemplify a belief-that-X wherein X is not upheld to be true? — javra
Some say, and rightly so, that when we believe some proposition or another, that we have a particular sort of attitude towards that proposition, and that that belief has propositional content. I would readily agree. When a competent user believes the following proposition...
"The mouse ran behind the tree."
...they believe that that proposition is true. The proposition is sometimes said to 'sit well' with the individual's other beliefs whenever there is no readily apparent disagreement between the proposition and the individual's worldview. I've no argument against that much.
How does this make it impossible for us to glean knowledge about language less belief?
— creativesoul
It sets a boundary to our philosophical forays. We'll run up against the unknowns of animal psychology. — ZzzoneiroCosm
My own appraisal is that you’ve misread what I’ve said: entails the attitude that X is true; not the fact that X is true. — javra
Perhaps, but is it of any consequence? — creativesoul
X equals there is a mouse behind the tree does it not? — creativesoul
X equals there is a mouse behind the tree does it not?
— creativesoul
Yes, and in so equating, how does belief-that-X not entail an upheld implicit attitude that X corresponds to what is - thereby, the implicit attitude that X is? An attitude what leads to some form of surprise or bewilderment when and if it turns out that the mouse is not behind the tree. — javra
To me that's very close to saying the cat believes the sound of the electric can opener means (signifies; is correctly* associated with the idea that) there might be a tasty treat in the kitchen. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Obsession is a kind of inspiration. I'm familiar with it. — ZzzoneiroCosm
What can we know, beyond any doubt, about language less belief? — creativesoul
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