No, he isn't. Jack is "drawing correlations that include the words 'a [ ] clock is working.'" So his belief is propositional. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Can you give me an example of a belief that is not a Proposition? — Michael Sol
"The clock is both working and not working"is a proposition that is necessarily false. — Banno
Notice that this claim is a de re belief ascription analogous to "Jack believes of that broken clock that is working" (which I was talking about a while ago) where the expression "the broken clock" is outside the completive clause of the predicate "to believe", and within the semantic scope of the one who makes the belief ascription. — neomac
...what is more critical, is that this rendering allows you to keep unclear what constitutes non-propositional belief contents. Which is what you should still explain to support your claims. — neomac
At time t1, Jack believed that clock was working.
At time t1, Jack believed that broken clock was working.
You're claiming the first is more accurate. I'm claiming the second is.
Prior to continuing... Do you agree with that much?
— creativesoul
Yes I do. — neomac
Broken clocks and wondering what time it is, — creativesoul
What is the content of Jack's belief at time t1? — creativesoul
Belief contents express the point of view (the intrinsic fitness conditions) of Jack's believing attitudes which best explain his behavior in the given circumstances at t1. In the case of false beliefs due to ignorance and not irrationality "that clock is working" — neomac
In the case of false beliefs due to ignorance and not irrationality "that clock is working" is better than "that broken clock is working" because that clock is working can be either true or false, while "that broken clock is working" is contradictory so always false i.e. it can not adequately express a case of ignorance. — neomac
the primary explanatory task for you is to exactly and completely explain the difference between propositional and non-propositional belief content as you understand it — neomac
That is why I asked you to give me the full non-propositional content which Jack is not aware of believing (and can not knowingly believe true) when you claim of him "Jack believes that broken clock is working". There are 3 items in this non-propositional "brocken" "clock" and "is working" — neomac
my primary task is not to develop a theory of belief, but to understand as much as I can the logic of our common belief attribution practices. — neomac
Impossible? We are discussing here if "that clock is working" is more or less accurate than "that broken clock is working". The full account I'm asking is about this and only this belief content attribution in this and only this example, not the belief of everybody in the universe present past and future.To give the full non-propositional content is impossible. — creativesoul
So you're saying that those words in quotes are the content of Jack's belief at time t1? — creativesoul
spell out what each single item of these 3 items (|broken|, |clock|, |is working|) that are part of the belief content you attribute to Jack in your non-propositional belief ascription rendering, is. You can start from |is working| — neomac
you are using these three items to determine the non propositional content of Jack's belief — neomac
the non-propositional content you attribute to Jack is... ..."Jack believes that broken clock is working" — neomac
the belief content is the fitness condition expressed by the completive clause — neomac
Then quote yourself when you explain what "is working" stands for. Because this is what I asked. And if you not find it, that's because you did not answer my question.That's at least the fourth time I've said that and answered your question. It's fishy that you act as if I've avoided it. — creativesoul
spell out what each single item of these 3 items (|broken|, |clock|, |is working|) that are part of the belief content you attribute to Jack in your non-propositional belief ascription rendering "Jack believes that broken clock is working", is. You can start from |is working| — neomac
Could you elaborate? — creativesoul
spell out what each single item of these 3 items (|broken|, |clock|, |is working|) that are part of the belief content you attribute to Jack in your non-propositional belief ascription rendering "Jack believes that broken clock is working", is. You can start from |is working| — neomac
You are conflating the content of my report with the content of Jack's belief. — creativesoul
I'm asking you (7th time): in the belief report that you claim more accurate, namely "At time t1, Jack believes that broken clock was working.", I see 3 items: broken, clock, was working. Explain what each of them stands for. Start from was working.At time t1, Jack believed that clock was working.
At time t1, Jack believed that broken clock was working.
You're claiming the first is more accurate. I'm claiming the second is.
Prior to continuing... Do you agree with that much? — neomac
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