The belief under our consideration is problematic for the conventional rendering of belief as a propositional attitude. It is not problematic for rendering it in propositional form — creativesoul
Jack believed that a broken clock was working. — creativesoul
“a broken clock was working and we once believed it” ? — neomac
, but only after you learned that is what the scribbles are labeled as. I've been using the term scribble, not word, because they are scribbles without rules and words when rules are applied to scribbles.Yep, this is correct if we take strings of characters, independently from any pre-defined linguistic codification. The difference is that with words (notice that the term “word” is already framing its referent, like an image, as a linguistic entity!) — neomac
Isn't it a seven of diamonds regardless of what card game that we are playing? We don't even need a game to define the image as a seven of diamonds, because we have rules about what scribble refers to which shapes (diamonds, spades, hearts, or clubs).You can have all kinds of sets of rules (e.g. the codification of traffic signs). Concerning the problem at hand, one thing that really matters is to understand if/what systems of visual codifications disambiguate an image always wrt a specific proposition: think about the codified images of a deck of cards. Does e.g. the following card have a propositional content that card game rules can help us identify? What would this be? — neomac
Lame. Wtf does it mean to be neutral on a question, if not "I don't want to answer it because the answer would contradict other things that I've said."?First of all, I'm neutral on the question. I'm just exploring the implications.
I'm starting with the assumption that my beliefs are limited by the limits of my language.
Why some fucker would assert that is a different topic. Maybe we could start a thread:
Why do some fuckers believe the limits of their languages are the limits of their worlds? — frank
So you can assert something, but when the assertion is questioned we need to start another thread? The ways in which people on this forum try to avoid answering valid questions grows stranger by the day.Why some fucker would assert that is a different topic. Maybe we could start a thread:
Why do some fuckers believe the limits of their languages are the limits of their worlds? — frank
Wait, I thought we were suppose to start another thread on this topic?If someone says "the limits of my language mean the limits of my world" is this assertion self contradictory?
What is the pov of the assertion? I'm asking you because you're mentally flexible. You could probably see it better than me. — frank
The question I asked above is much simpler and can move us forward in our conversation, yet you'd rather waste time trying to interpret some nonsensical string of scribbles. — Harry Hindu
What does a language that you don't know look like? And when describing what a language you know looks like, are you describing the language or your knowledge of the language? — Harry Hindu
By definition, a broken clock doesn't work, so your proposition makes no sense. — Olivier5
We're still on this? CS doesn't yet realize that the proposition, "Jack believed that a broken clock was working." isn't something Jack is saying (believing), but what someone else is saying (believing) about Jack and the clock? Who is making this statement? It certainly can't be Jack.Jack believed that a broken clock was working.
— creativesoul
Is there a point? I don't understand how it is that you don't understand.
(Jack believed that a broken clock was working) is ambiguous.
Is (the clock is broken) within the scope of Jack's belief? Then you have Jack believed that: ((The clock is broken) & (the clock is working)); Poor old Jack needs help.
Or is it outside the scope? Then you have: The clock is broken and (Jack believed that: (the clock is working))
No problem. In both cases the belief is presented as a propositional attitude. — Banno
but only after you learned that is what the scribbles are labeled as. I've been using the term scribble, not word, because they are scribbles without rules and words when rules are applied to scribbles. — Harry Hindu
Isn't it a seven of diamonds regardless of what card game that we are playing? We don't even need a game to define the image as a seven of diamonds, because we have rules about what scribble refers to which shapes (diamonds, spades, hearts, or clubs). — Harry Hindu
The move to set it outside the scope of Jack's belief is due to the fact that it would be impossible for Jack to make such a statement based on his belief. It would be what someone else is stating about their own beliefs about Jack and the clock. After all, Jack could be tricking the observer (his boss) into thinking he doesn't really know what time it was as an excuse for being late.What I do not understand is the move to set (that broken clock) outside of the scope of Jack's belief and replace it with (that clock) when the example hinges upon the fact that the clock is broken but Jack believes what it says. Jack does not know it is broken, so he cannot believe that it is broken. I grant that much entirely, but there's no reason to say that he cannot believe that broken clock. — creativesoul
What do you mean by "propositional content"? What are you pointing at when you use the string of scribbles, "propositional content"?Maybe regardless of any specific card game, but the challenge here is to express the propositional content of that image (something that an image can share with sentences, different propositional attitudes, different languages): so is the propositional content of that image rendered by “this is a seven of diamonds” or “this is a seven of diamonds in standard 52-card deck” or “this is a card of diamonds different from a 1 to 6 or 8 to 13 of diamonds” or “this is a seven of a suit different from clubs, hearts, spades” or “this is a card with seven red diamond-shaped figures and red shaped number seven arranged so and so” or any combination of these propositions? All of them are different propositions which one is the right one? BTW “this” is an indexical, and shouldn’t be part of the content of an unambiguous proposition: so maybe the propositional content is “something is a seven of diamonds”? And so on.
At least this is how I understand the philosophical task of proving that images have propositional content, but I'm neither sure that others understand this philosophical task in the same way I just drafted, nor that this task can be accomplished successfully. — neomac
What I do not understand is the move to set (that broken clock) outside of the scope of Jack's belief and replace it with (that clock) when the example hinges upon the fact that the clock is broken but Jack believes what it says. Jack does not know it is broken, so he cannot believe that it is broken. — creativesoul
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.