So against what measure am I comparing my belief that the square root of four is one, in order that it is wrong? — Isaac
It’s no different to saying “no human has two heads” which is true if I’m the only human or if I’m one of seven billion. — Michael
I disagree. The form is similar, but I claim that concepts are special. — Pie
There is no measure. It’s just either right or wrong. — Michael
Do you understand the difference between mathematical realism and mathematical formalism? — Michael
OK, so how do we know if not by comparing the wrong belief to the right one and finding it not to match? — Isaac
I believe so, yes, though I'm far from expert on the matter. But I don't see how formalism rescues the solipsist. — Isaac
How do you know which belief is right so which to use as a comparison? — Michael
being wrong doesn’t depend on the existence of mind-independent entities. We can get maths wrong even if mathematical realism is false. — Michael
Am I to think that you imagine the possibility of a Kant without some rich culture that birth and trained him, gave him the very languages of his art ? — Pie
My focus on language is simply that of an epistemologist trying to figure out a philosopher's minimum commitment. — Pie
I oppose the view that (most) concepts are 'pre-given' — Pie
Was it not clear that my point was about language acquisition ? — Pie
Then koncepts are public and what actually matters here. — Pie
I suggest that it's not confusion but simply a matter of replacing a broken theory with something better. — Pie
Instead of what's essentially a theology of mystic Forms..... — Pie
The one used by mathematicians is right. We just ask. — Isaac
I'm enquiring as to how. If not by some sort of comparison to the right answer, then by what means? — Isaac
Is that an empirical claim ? Or a metaphysical claim ? If it's a metaphysical claim, it's a claim about the concepts knowledge and future, it seems to me. — Pie
What....you never heard the expression “thinking outside the box”? What is a culture if not a box? Being in a culture and conditioned by it, does not necessitate being restricted to it. — Mww
....but there’s nothing in that that says the philosopher’s minimum commitment has to be language.. I would say a philosopher’s minimum commitment, is understanding. — Mww
“Something better” and “broken theory” are subjective judgements. Who says it’s better, and, better than what? — Mww
And what’s broken about some extant theory? — Mww
So....you know what justice is because you’ve experience things that seem just or unjust to you? How does an experience of an unjust incident inform you of how it could be so, if you didn’t already have an idea what form justice itself must have? — Mww
https://sites.pitt.edu/~rbrandom/Texts/Pragmatism_Inferentialism_and_Modality_i.pdfObservational vocabulary is not a vocabulary one could use though one used no other. Non-inferential reports of the results of observation do not form an autonomous stratum of language. In particular, when we look at what one must do to count as making a non-inferential report, we see that that is not a practice one could engage in except in the context of inferential practices of using those observations as premises from which to draw inferential conclusions, as reasons for making judgments and undertaking commitments that are not themselves observations.The contribution to this argument of Sellars’s inferential functionalism about semantics lies in underwriting the claim that for any judgment, claim, or belief to be contentful in the way required for it to be cognitively, conceptually, or epistemically significant, for it to be a potential bit of knowledge or evidence, to be a sapient state or status, it must be able to play a distinctive role in reasoning: it must be able to serve as a reason for further judgments, claims, or beliefs, hence as a premise from which they can be inferred.
There are plenty of unsolved problems in maths, e.g the Reimann hypothesIs. Are you saying that the Reimann hypothesis isn’t truth-apt because it hasn’t been solved? Or does its truth (or falsity) depend on mathematical realism? Or perhaps it’s true (or false) despite mathematicians not having solved it and despite mathematical realism not being the case? — Michael
How we can know that we’re wrong? Maybe we can’t (a point in favour of skeptical positions like solipsism). But we don’t need to know that we’re wrong to be wrong. — Michael
If there's no plausible means by which they can be wrong, the rational conclusion is that they can't be wrong. — Isaac
The means by which they can be wrong is just being wrong. If they believe that the Reimann hypothesis is correct, but it isn't, then they're wrong. If they believe that the Reimann hypothesis is incorrect, but it is, then they're wrong. — Michael
But you've not given an account of what it would mean to be wrong for a solipsist. — Isaac
Believing that the Reimann hypothesis is correct, but it isn't. Or believing that God exists, but he doesn't. Or believing that there are other people with private thoughts or sensations, but there aren't. Or believing that the world will end in 10,000 years, but it won't. — Michael
If it's not about knowing then why are you asking about measures? — Michael
I recall that you hate linguistic philosophy, but language is what you must make your case in. — Pie
Your version of understanding, if we grant a nonlinguistic version of this in the first place, isn't enough. — Pie
As Kant saw, reason is autonomous, one and universal, — Pie
How does an experience of an unjust incident inform you of how it could be so, if you didn’t already have an idea what form justice itself must have?
— Mww
We could actually talk about semantics if you want. — Pie
I'm asking about the "...it isn't", "...he doesn't", "...it won't" parts. What do any of those propositions mean for a solipsist? How are they any different to the belief in the first place? — Isaac
Because a difference in measure is a plausible account of what it means to be wrong. No one need check, or know that such a difference is the case. It's just that if there were such a difference, you'd be wrong. I'm asking for such an account for the solipsist. — Isaac
Consider the simple disquotational account of truth:
"God exists" is true iff God exists. — Michael
A falsehood isn't a lie. — Michael
No, they could honestly believe that God exists. They're just wrong if he doesn't. — Michael
Because all that exists is their mind, and so God must be in it. — Isaac
The epistemological solipsist claims that we can't know that other minds and mind-independent objects exist. He doesn't claim that other minds and mind-independent objects don't exist. That would be ontological solipsism. — Michael
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