It wouldn't be a specific sentence, or specific scribbles, or specific mental objects. It would be sentences in general, or scribbles in general, or mental objects in general. Just as the content of a computer's hard drive is data, even though you and I have different data on our hard drives.We know it isn't a sentence because multiple sentences can be used to express the same proposition.
It's not an utterance (sounds or marks) for the same reason. Distinct utterances, same proportion.
It's not a mental object because...same thing. You and I can think of the same proposition, but my mental state can't be identical to yours. — frank
It's an abstract object. It's the primary truth bearer. — frank
Different propositions tell different truths depending on their contents (symbols) and what they refer to (what is the case). — Harry Hindu
frank
Ok, and does it have content? If so, back to my first question. — bongo fury
A lot of famous people say stuff. It doesn't make it true, or useful, because they are famous.Two is a prime number.
The above is an utterance of a sentence. It expresses a proposition, specifically that two is a prime number.
Jim, pointing to a 2 written on a white board, said "It's a prime number."
Jim expressed the proposition that two is a prime number.
What this example (straight from a famous philosopher) shows is that discerning the proposition expressed by the utterance of a sentence is context dependent. — frank
It is content. — frank
Here we are talking past each other again. In 1 and 2 you are talking about the some string of scribbles (descriptive sentences that do not share the same proposition). You're talking about words, not images. You're explaining how words, not images, are ambiguous. I want to know how a wordless image can be ambiguous without using language to describe it. I'm thinking the image is a description of something - either ambiguous or concrete - and words - either ambiguous or concrete - can describe the image (but that would only be useful to someone who can't see the image), or what the image is about (what someone who is just looking at some image believes it to be informing them of). I wish you would be more clear about which one you are talking about.My point was that images are ambiguous in 2 senses: 1. they can match different descriptive sentences that do no share the same proposition. 2. Propositions - differently from sentences - are supposed to be unambiguous, however images can be not only ambiguous but also be ambiguous in ways that no descriptive sentence can render (image ambiguity does not match sentence ambiguity).
These observations are relevant b/c if we are supposed to take propositions as correlates that different sentences, different languages, different propositional attitude can share, we can wonder if propositions can be shared across different media (images vs linguistic expressions) — neomac
Huh? How is it false? I also said that you can translate different words in the same language (synonyms). What if I were to say that instead of translating the scribbles, we were translating the rules by which the scribbles are used.OK let’s start again. I remember you claiming “When translating languages, that is what is translated - the state-of-affairs the scribbles refer to”. Now, I understand your comment as implying the truth of the following conditional: if translation consists in replacing statements from at least 2 different languages co-referring the same state-of-affairs, then the French translations (I provided in my example) could translate the English sentences indifferently, because they all are referring to the same state of affaires (at least to me). But the consequent of that conditional is false, so it should be false also the conditional. — neomac
You seem to be reading more into what I've been saying than what I've actually been saying. Semantic correlations are themselves effects of prior causes as correlating some symbol and what it refers to is dependent upon the experience and education that one has in establishing those correlations. We interpret what some visual or auditory experience means based upon prior experiences. Sometimes we get it wrong like in the case of seeing a mirage. When we understand that what we see isn't objects (like puddles of water), we see light, then we interpret the causal relationships more accurately - like there is a "middle-man" called light in the causal sequence that we call "seeing", and that we don't see objects directly, or else we could see objects in the dark - without any light.My central claim is that semantic relations can not be reduced to sequences of mind-independent causal chains. You seem to do the same (due to the relevance of the notion of “mind” in your argument), but you are also developing your discourse over aspects that simply widen the scope of that central claim (e.g. with the reference to art works), which is fine but I'm more interested in arguments that support or question the claim: semantic correlations (between sign and referent) can not be reduced to causal chains. To support that central claim, one could for example argue that while art works are ambiguous in some sense, any causal chain involved in the intentional production/experience/understanding of a piece of art work can not be qualified as "ambiguous". While to question that main claim one could argue that indeed ambiguity can be reduced to some probabilistic feature of causal chains involving psychological states, etc.
In any case, I'm not interested to deal with this specific task in this thread. So I'll leave it at that. — neomac
What else would belief include if not just experience and episodic memory? In the moment of your dream, you are remembering what is happening and therefore believing it is happening. What happened in the beginning of the dream is useful to remember in the middle of the dream, or else how would you know you're still in the same dream? After you wake up you still have the memories because they were stored when you were believing, not when you aren't. Because they aren't useful memories they will eventually be forgotten.In your past comment, you wrote “The act of memorizing an experience is the act of believing it”. This looks as an identity claim to me, and I don’t support such identity claim. For me belief exceeds both experience and episodic memory. Maybe you wanted to say that an act of memorizing a given experience always results from believing in that experience. Even if this was true, it would be just an empirical fact, namely something that doesn’t exclude the logical possibility of believing a given experience without memorizing it and memorizing a given experience without believing in that experience. Besides there are actual counter-examples: I remember a dream but I do not believe in that dream, I do not take whatever seemed to happen in that dream to be the case. Maybe you want to claim that while dreaming I was believing whatever was experiencing, and that resulted in me memorizing it. But that we believe in our dreams while dreaming can be acknowledged for all our most common dreams, yet we do not seem to remember all of them either.
The correlation between usefulness, memory, experience and belief you are pointing at, again looks empirical to me, not logical (which is the part I’m more interested in), and even more slippery because what counts as useful is no less controversial than what counts as memory, experience, and belief. — neomac
That's fair enough. It's the end of the road, and doesn't itself refer to anything and isn't about anything? — bongo fury
What would it mean for there to be false propositions if not that the proposition doesn't refer to some state-of-affairs that isn't just another proposition being stated?Right. It doesn't refer anymore than the world refers to something else. Russell wanted to picture it as: a proposition is a state of affairs. The snag there is that there are false propositions. — frank
Meaning is the relationship between cause and effect. — Harry Hindu
Russell wanted to picture it as: a proposition is a state of affairs. The snag there is that there are false propositions. — frank
What is the content of a sentential utterance? And is it sentential? — bongo fury
What is the content of a sentential utterance? And is it sentential? — bongo fury
I would say the utterance of a sentence expresses a proposition. — frank
I don't know what the second question means exactly. — frank
Do you know anything about the data/information idea? — frank
Plus, if you want to talk to a reliable source, — frank
Committing logical fallacies isn't helping your argument. You should try a different argument.This weed isn't helping your philosophy skills. Change to a different strain. — frank
Huh? Meaning requires being meaningful to something or someone? This is circular logic. What does it mean for something to be meaningful to someone?An all too common error; the conflation of meaning and causality.The former requires being meaningful to something or someone, whereas the latter does not. — creativesoul
You're conflating causal relationships between clouds and rain and someone taking notice that clouds mean rain. Are you saying the act of taking notice is meaning? Observations are meanings?The conflation is the basis for many who claim that clouds mean rain even when there is noone around to take notice... — creativesoul
What form does a sentence take? What form does a proposition take? How can you tell the difference between a sentence and a proposition? Can propositions exist independently of sentences? If so, how? How do you know you're thinking of a sentence as opposed to a proposition?I would say the the utterance of a sentence expresses a proposition. I don't know what the second question means exactly. We might use sentences to identify propositions, or it's the object of a that clause: "It's true that..." — frank
Scribbles and spoken sounds?No, I wanted folk here to explain and clarify what they mean by "content". — bongo fury
Can propositions exist independently of sentences? If so, how? — Harry Hindu
I would need "world" defined in this instance.Did you see that movie Arrival? If you haven't, I won't spoil it, but it's related to this question.
“the limits of my language mean the limits of my world”. What does this mean to you? — frank
then I'll say that what it means is a strange form of solipsism where reality is only the use of some language. — Harry Hindu
So the contents of this solipsistic reality would be only scribbles and spoken sounds. — Harry Hindu
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