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. — Harry Hindu
SO you do not understand that...
"the broken clock" is not a description Jack could correctly make?... — Banno
SO you do not understand that...
"The broken clock" could not be within the scope of Jack's belief? — Banno
...actually... — creativesoul
It's that "broken clock" is an extensional definition, while believes is an intensional operator.
The typical example of intension is
Jack believes Stephen King's first novel is The Shining.
If we stuck an extensional definition in there it would read
Jack believes that Carrie is The Shining.
Same thing. — frank
Seems to me that this is clearly a belief that does not allow itself to be rendered in propositional form such that the believer would hold it to be true, or as true. — creativesoul
You're moving goal posts. Jack's beliefs can change, sure, but which belief is the statement about - before or after he became aware? You're being purposely obtuse, such that I don't believe your goal here is to reach any common ground with anyone, rather you seem to have too much time on your hands and a need to waste other people's time.However, after becoming aware of the fact that he believed that a broken clock was working, by showing him that clock had stopped, after becoming aware of exctly how he had come to believe that it was 3 o'clock, he could no longer believe that that clock was working. At this point in time, Jack could readliy admit to having once believed that that particular clock was working, and that that particular clock was broken at that time, so he had once believed that that particular broken clock was working. — creativesoul
I take it to mean, something that at least can be shared by different sentences (e.g. “Jim loves Alice” and “that guy called Jim loves Alice” ), by different propositional attitudes (e.g. I believe that Jim loves Alice, I hope that Jim loves Alice), by different languages (e.g. “Jim loves Alice” and “Jim aime Alice”) and determines their usage/fitness conditions. Those who theorize about propositions have richer answers than this of course (e.g. Frege’s propositions, Russell’s propositions, unstructured propositions, etc.). But I’m not a fan of these theories, so I’ll let others do the job.
Anyways, I hear people wondering about images as propositions or as having propositional content, without elaborating or clarifying, so this was my piece of brainstorming about this subject. — neomac
Well, again, it depends on our goals in communicating. What are we trying to talk about? How was a 52 deck of cards invented? What is the history of the 52-deck of cards? There had to either be an idea for a 52-deck of cards in someone's head that evolved from pre-existing ideas about games with cards that did not include 7 of diamonds. So it isn't likely that someone just created a 7 of diamonds card without also creating the rest of the deck, hence the 7 of diamonds is only meaningful with the rest of the deck. With that I can agree, but it still is possible for someone to find a card with the number 7 and 7 diamonds on it that has never seen playing cards. How would they go about determining the meaning of the card, or could they use it for something else, like a bookmark, or as an object for bringing luck (lucky 7)? When using it as a bookmark are they misusing the card, or are they simply co-opting an object (scribbles and images) for other uses?To know that I’m confusing the propositional content of that image, presupposes that you know what the propositional content of that image is. But I’m not convinced it’s that simple, see what you just wrote about that image: <it is a sheet of paper with red ink in shape of diamonds and a “7”> while you previously wrote something like: <it’s a seven of diamonds >. Is it essential for the propositional content of that image the mention of ink or paper? A seven of diamonds tattooed on the the body doesn’t share the same propositional content of the image on paper? How about the arrangement of the diamonds on the surface of the card? How about the shade of red? How about the change of light condition under which the image is seen? If I warped that image with an image editor to make it hardly recognisable but still recognisable after some time as a 7 of diamonds, shouldn’t we include in the propositional content of that image all the features that allowed me to recognise it as a 7 of diamonds, despite the warping? And so on…
Again, I’m just brainstorming, so no strong opinion on any of that. Indeed I was hoping to get some feedback from those who talk about propositional content of images, or images as propositions. — neomac
Could you apply this to (Jack believed that a broken clock was working)? I'm curious to see exactly how it is the same... — creativesoul
He never held an attitude towards the proposition (that broken clock is working) such that he believed it true. — creativesoul
You're moving goal posts. — Harry Hindu
I think that it would be helpful to show how the objection is inapplicable to what I'm arguing here. — creativesoul
I just don't see anything here that supports your contention. — Banno
I understand what you are arguing. You're just wrong. — frank
SO now I am wondering if you have a clear grasp of what a proposition is. — Banno
Yeah but now you're talking about Jack having different beliefs after becoming aware of something that CONTRADICTS his prior belief.That broken clock is working) has been proposed as the belief from the beginning. Any change was for elucidation only, not as a way to avoid valid objection. Evidently you do not understand what's being argued. — creativesoul
However, after becoming aware of the fact that he believed that a broken clock was working, by showing him that clock had stopped, after becoming aware of exctly how he had come to believe that it was 3 o'clock, he could no longer believe that that clock was working. — creativesoul
It seems that I am the only one around here who finds the bottom set to be more accurate and/or acceptable than the first. — creativesoul
So, above are two different ways to describe some of the beliefs under consideration. It seems that I am the only one around here who finds the bottom set to be more accurate and/or acceptable than the first. — 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.