To talk in terms of intension (I think this is the proper spelling) just is to talk in terms of being about or of something. For me terminology is not so important as what's being said. — Janus
when taken account of with naming and describing practices.
— creativesoul
I don't think you need this bit. I don't think the naming and taking account play a role. — ZzzoneiroCosm
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From whence comes propositional form, if not as a direct result from naming and descriptive practices? — creativesoul
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So, before humans... reality took the form of a proposition: subject-predicate? — creativesoul
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You're conflating your account with what's being taken into account. — creativesoul
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So, before humans... reality took the form of a proposition: subject-predicate? — creativesoul
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I'm not sure what you're doing here recently. The quality of your contributions has taken a sudden slide downhill... Too bad. — creativesoul
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The starting point of belief formation — creativesoul
Banno
Banno
Contemporary Anglophone philosophers of mind generally use the term “belief” to refer to the attitude we have, roughly, whenever we take something to be the case or regard it as true. — SEP
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attitudes — Banno
The individual has an attitude towards the statement such that they take the statement to be true. — Banno
dropping the word proposition — Banno
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dropping the word proposition — Banno
A proposition has this form: existents doing things.
Reality has this form: existents doing things. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Banno
"the sort of thing which is apprehended" — ZzzoneiroCosm
...existents doing things... — ZzzoneiroCosm
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Where does "apprehended" get you? — Banno
Propositions are [ ] what is common between certain statements. So "the cup is on the shelf", "la taza está en el estante" and "bikarinn er í hillunni"... — Banno
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As if we understood "existent" better than, say, individuals, predicates and quantifiers. — Banno
Banno
My preference would be to talk in terms of propositions as statements that can be either true or false...
Existent: something that exists. I don't see a problem. — ZzzoneiroCosm
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Despite the innumerable thread on that topic? — Banno
Banno
In this context, 'existent' is a word I define as: something (anything) that exists. — ZzzoneiroCosm
A proposition has this form: existents doing things. — ZzzoneiroCosm
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Seems to me you are overthinking propositions — Banno
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SO how will you deal with "Fred believes unicorns do not exist"? — Banno
Banno
This makes sense to me: the proposition isn't the words or a statement but rather what is apprehended in a statement. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Banno
Banno
Moore’s doubts led him to postulate what appear to be merely possible facts as the objects of the propositional attitudes. When a subject believes that x is F and x is not F, the object of belief is the non-existent but possible fact that x is F. See section below for further discussion of possible facts and their relations to propositions.
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How does your account of propositions as "existents doing things" deal with "Unicorns do not exist". Your existent - the unicorn - does not exist; is doing not existing. — Banno
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why bother trying to invent a new theory when we have a more than adequate grammar already? — Banno
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