I hope this is said jokingly, I mean "brain cells", right?"Believe" is a verb and is a frequent activity or an action of human brain cells. — Ken Edwards
Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons; no believing needed. — Janus
You say:" I do get the often grave problem of unjustified belief treated as incontrovertible knowledge. But I so far take it that such isn’t equivalent to belief per se.)
I think that beleif per se would also apply to Justified belief. — Ken Edwards
But I have since noticed that believing the lies that are told to one or believing two different things at the same time or pretending to believe them or coming to believe ones own lies is, alas, very common every where. My God! - just look at the remnants of the republican party — Ken Edwards
God is a major criminal and should receive tens of thousands of murder conviction. — Ken Edwards
That the use of the word "believe" is very tricky and should be carefully considered when used. — Ken Edwards
As one concrete example, one sees movement in a very dark corner close to oneself outdoors. To one's momentary awareness the movement could at least either be produced by wind-blown debris, like leaves, or else by a small animal, like a rat. Both seem relatively reasonable to you and both can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons; still, one does not know which alternative is true. If one then moves away from one’s position so as to avoid the possibility of contact with a small animal, how can this activity be accounted for in the absence of belief (to whatever extent conscious and/or subconscious) that the movement was likely produced by a small animal (rather than, for example, by wind-blown leaves)? — javra
If it's not knowledge, such a frame of mind would result in at least two alternatives being tentatively entertained: at minimum, that of X being and that of X not being. How can acting out on any alternative not entail some type of belief that the alternative one acts out on is at least likely true? — javra
Janus you just said: "Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons; no believing needed."
That statement is fundamental and sums up and modifies this entire conversation. — Ken Edwards
Sure. Belief, in and of itself, would also apply to "justified true belief", which is the commonly accepted definition of descriptive knowledge. Which in turn would make belief and indispensable aspect of, at the very least, descriptive knowledge. — javra
Prediction, to put it succinctly. This happens whether we like it or not. Our minds are constantly looking for patterns and making predictions. — praxis
Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons; no believing needed. — Janus
Yet my never being able to know such things is of no concern if I don't concern myself with believing. and remain satisfied with entertaining. — Janus
For instance upper class Mexicans and the upper levels of the rare middle class are never tortured but the lower classes are routinely and impersonally tortured without exception when they are arrested. The arrests are rarely the results of a police report . but usually result from a denunciation. The reason for torture is that torture is the only information retrieval system that they know of.
I bacame a "Born again athiest at the age of 17 — Ken Edwards
"Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons;" is what it means to believe anything. All you've done is show that you can't escape believing anything.Janus you just said: "Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons; no believing needed."
That statement is fundamental and sums up and modifies this entire conversation. — Ken Edwards
Oh, sorry. I was almost sure that you used "brain cells" in a humoriys way. I could never think that somenone would say seriously that bain cells actually "believe". But now I do. Esp. after your claiming that your brain cells dictate to you what to type and, in fact, force you to do it.I don't get it. Why should anyone joke about "Brain Cells". It is my own brain cells or, more correctly patterns and arrrangements of my brain cells that are typing these words. — Ken Edwards
In the example provided, the mind predicts two conflicting alternatives are possible: wind-blown leaves or a small animal. Also given is that you do not consciously know which alternative is real. To consciously act on either is not prediction: the predictions of if-then are already embedded in each alternative. So prediction as stipulated does not account for why one chooses to act on one alternative but not the other. — javra
Anything that is not known but seems reasonable can be accepted and entertained provisionally for pragmatic reasons; no believing needed.
— Janus
Indeed, but only after already having a belief system intact. Suspending one's judgment is a metacognitive endeavor. Metacognition is existentially dependent upon pre-existing belief. — creativesoul
You asked: “If one then moves away from one’s position so as to avoid the possibility of contact with a small animal, how can this activity be accounted for in the absence of belief (to whatever extent conscious and/or subconscious) that the movement was likely produced by a small animal (rather than, for example, by wind-blown leaves)?”
If a mind accurately predicts the presence of a rat then moving away from it, assuming the rat is rabid or whatever, is a good and adaptive prediction. Otherwise it’s a prediction error. — praxis
I agree with every single word you said. My concern about believing is irrelevent here I think — Ken Edwards
I know(enough information), thus I believe(in the universe). It is belief that! — Varde
Germany was very cruel to Belgium citizens and mistreated or murdered many. — Ken Edwards
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