At time t1, the individual believes that that particular clock is a working one. It is not. The individual's belief is false. False belief cannot possibly be true. Therefore, the individual's belief cannot possibly be true. "That clock is working" can be. It only follows that "that clock is working" cannot possibly be what the individual believes. — creativesoul
False belief cannot possibly be true. — creativesoul
Therefore, the individual's belief cannot possibly be true. — creativesoul
It only follows that "that clock is working" cannot possibly be what the individual believes — creativesoul
At time t1, the individual believes that that particular clock is a working one. It is not. The individual's belief is false. "That clock is working" can be [true]. — creativesoul
At time t1, the individual believes that that particular clock is a working one. It is not [0]. The individual's belief is false [1]. False belief cannot possibly be true [2]. Therefore, the individual's belief cannot possibly be true [3]. "That clock is working" can be [4]. It only follows that "that clock is working" cannot possibly be what the individual believes [5]. — creativesoul
Twat. — “creativesoul
So your argument amounts to an ignoratio elenchi fallacy. — neomac
You've ascribed a belief to Jack that is true. I have not. Jack's belief is false.
Correct but I don’t get what is supposed to prove... — neomac
If all propositions can possibly be either true or false, and false belief cannot possibly be true, then propositions are not equivalent to false belief.
If all propositions can possibly be either true or false, and true belief cannot possibly be false, then propositions are not equivalent to true belief. — creativesoul
If all propositions can possibly be either true or false, and false propositions cannot possibly be true, then propositions are not equivalent to false propositions.
If all propositions can possibly be either true or false, and true propositions cannot possibly be false, then propositions are not equivalent to true propositions.
If all beliefs can possibly be either true or false, and false beliefs cannot possibly be true, then beliefs are not equivalent to false beliefs.
If all beliefs can possibly be either true or false, and true beliefs cannot possibly be false, then beliefs are not equivalent to true beliefs. — neomac
However, differently from your former 2 claims, what these latter 4 claims make more evident is that:We should distinguish qualified and unqualified subjects (like “true proposition” or “false proposition” vs “proposition”, or “true belief” or “false belief” vs “belief”) as reported in these claims. If we do not distinguish them appropriately, then the antecedents of the conditional claims will be contradictory: e.g. if “all propositions” means “true propositions and false propositions” then “all propositions can possibly be either true or false” is a contradiction in terms, while if we take "propositions" to generically refer to any proposition prior to (or independently from) any assessment of its truth-value then there is no contradiction.
The validity of the “cannot possibly be true/false” requirement (as in “false propositions cannot possibly be true”) depends on the meaning of “true” and “false” (which are contradictory terms), not on the meaning of “belief” or “proposition” per se. — neomac
what the author takes to be an accurate report and/or rendering of what's being critiqued. — creativesoul
emphasis above is mine
Differently from my claims... — creativesoul
In the first rendering they compared kinds of propositions. In the second, they compared kinds of beliefs. Hence, it is an irrelevant critique, as a result of critiquing something other than what I wrote. — creativesoul
If all A's can possibly be true or false, and false B's cannot possibly be true, then A's are not equivalent to false B's.
If all A's can possibly be true or false, and true B's cannot possibly be false, then A's are not equivalent to true B's. — creativesoul
An astute reader will note that the critique above holds good only if we conflate belief and statements. — creativesoul
It is relevant to show:
the genesis of your ignoratio elenchi fallacy as explained here (third point).
That even if you compare beliefs and propositions you should distinguish qualified and unqualified subjects in your conditionals
The validity of the “cannot possibly be true/false” requirement (as in “false propositions cannot possibly be true”) depends on the meaning of “true” and “false” (which are contradictory terms), not on the meaning of “belief” or “proposition” per se. — neomac
When an author is critiquing something other than what I've wrote, and/or something that quite simply does not follow from what I wrote, it is an irrelevant critique. — creativesoul
An astute reader will note that the critique above holds good only if we conflate belief and statements.
— creativesoul
I'm not conflating anything — neomac
Reminding the reader of the notion of belief you're working from again... — creativesoul
Let’s not forget however that this argument must be understood within your specific theoretical framework — neomac
False belief cannot possibly be true. — creativesoul
Reminding the reader of the notion of belief you're working from again...
— creativesoul
Unfortunately for you, my objections to your ignoratio elenchi fallacy do not depend on my theory — neomac
You're such a moron — creativesoul
The objection was based upon a conflation of belief and statements. I do not conflate belief and statements. The objection was based upon what you did, not I. What you did is irrelevant. — creativesoul
False belief cannot possibly be true.
— creativesoul
Which I'm not questioning. Indeed also false statements cannot possibly be true. — neomac
...we can claim of a belief (or proposition) that is proven to be true (or false), that it could have been false (or true)... — neomac
I'm explicitly stating that my 4 claims are different from your 2 claims, except for their logic structure... — neomac
I had fun primarily in being articulate, clear, focused, logic and versatile while formulating my objections against your view... — neomac
False belief cannot possibly be true.
— creativesoul
Which I'm not questioning. Indeed also false statements cannot possibly be true. — neomac
...we can claim of a belief (or proposition) that is proven to be true (or false), that it could have been false (or true)... — neomac
Arriving at incoherence is a sign of self-contradiction and/or equivocation. — creativesoul
If a belief B is false then B is not true and if a belief B is true then B is not false.
1. If a belief B is false then B is not true and if B is true then B is not false 2. B is actually true (or false) and B could have been false (or true)
1. If a statement S is false then S is not true and if S is true then S is not false 2. S is actually true (or false) and S could have been false (or true) 3. If a proposition P is false then P is not true and if P is true then P is not false 4. P is actually true (or false) and P could have been false (or true)
The structure was different. That is exactly what I pointed out. So, they are not just different except for that structure. — creativesoul
If all beliefs can possibly be either true or false, and false beliefs cannot possibly be true, then beliefs are not equivalent to false beliefs. If all beliefs can possibly be either true or false, and true beliefs cannot possibly be false, then beliefs are not equivalent to true beliefs.
How many strikes do we get again in your game before being counted out? — creativesoul
What does the modal predicate "cannot possibly be" mean here? Are you saying if an individual's belief is false in the actual world, then it is not true in any possible world? In other words, if any individual's belief is false, then it is necessarily false, and if any individual's belief is true, then it is necessarily true, so there are no contingent true/false beliefs only necessary true/false beliefs? And if you do not mean that, what else do you mean exactly? Can you spell it out?when we know that an individual's belief is false, we can also know that it cannot possibly be true — creativesoul
vsIf all A's can possibly be either true or false, and false A's cannot possibly be true, then A's are not equivalent to false A's.
If all A's can possibly be either true or false, and true A's cannot possibly be false, then A's are not equivalent to true A’s. — creativesoul
If all A's can possibly be true or false, and false B's cannot possibly be true, then A's are not equivalent to false B's.
If all A's can possibly be true or false, and true B's cannot possibly be false, then A's are not equivalent to true B's. — creativesoul
The above presupposes that you have a good grasp of my view. — creativesoul
So... show me. — creativesoul
Where you accuse me of self-contradiction and/or equivocation without spelling out in detail where the contradiction or the equivocation is. You just slam your preposterous claims, and then you move on with your dumb rant as if it was enough to quote me to make your point!False belief cannot possibly be true.
— creativesoul
Which I'm not questioning. Indeed also false statements cannot possibly be true. — neomac
...we can claim of a belief (or proposition) that is proven to be true (or false), that it could have been false (or true)... — neomac
Arriving at incoherence is a sign of self-contradiction and/or equivocation. You've littered the thread and this conversation with such things... — creativesoul
2 examples of inappropriate quotations:
↪creativesoul
My sentence was creatively chopped out by a deranged soul.
↪creativesoul
Taken in its context, my claim was referring to a different example from the one we are handling here, and only in order to clarify some implications of your views, not mine. (But now that you made me think about it, I would not be surprised if also on that occasion you were already committing a similar ignoratio elenchi fallacy ). — neomac
But why is it impossible to knowingly believe a falsehood or to knowingly be mistaken ? What is "knowingly" supposed to mean here? Can you spell it out?is impossible to knowingly believe a falsehood; and it is impossible to knowingly be mistaken — creativesoul
[2] "all A's can possibly be either true or false" would be a contradiction in terms if "all A's" meant "all true A's and all false A's" — neomac
its truth conditions (which you did not specify) depend on the meaning of the word “true” and “false” (which are contradictory terms) not on the meaning of “belief” — neomac
Yet I have another objection. Now that you made clear that your argument is only this:
Jack was mistaken. It is impossible to knowingly be. Thus, a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe.
Then your argument (as it is) is a perfect example of non sequitur, logically speaking. I'll formalise it for you:
premise 1: Jack was mistaken (p)
premise 2: It is impossible to knowingly be mistaken (q)
conclusion: a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe (c)
p
q
-------
c
This is not a valid logic deduction!!! — neomac
Care to further discuss the topic, as compared/contrasted to my interlocutor?
— creativesoul
I don't see how we can further it. — neomac
Do you find the account I set out in the first three posts of the debate to be a complete one? — creativesoul
We can set all the other stuff aside for now and focus upon what counts as belief.
Then, we will see how much sense it makes to ascribe belief to another, because we will have some standard of belief for comparing our ascriptions/attribution to. — creativesoul
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. — creativesoul
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