You are simply misrepresenting what I said (as is your usual habit) to continue with a strawman argument. I didn't say that it was necessary that you had to have toast instead of cereal. To the contrary, I said that was a choice you made from real possibilities. What I say, is that now, after you've had toast, it is impossible to change that fact, so it is necessary. So I'll repeat, though I doubt it will affect your strawman, before the act, it is possible, after the act, it is necessary. — Metaphysician Undercover
Belief about the future goes from prediction to knowledge when it becomes true, and from prediction to falsehood when it becomes false. — creativesoul
My answer would probably be the same as MU's on this point. — Luke
Even if I freely chose to have toast instead of cereal for breakfast and nothing about having toast was inevitable, you would call this event "necessary" only because it is no longer possible to replay the event and to choose again. This fails to answer whether the original event was necessary or merely possible in the first place. — Luke
Belief about the future goes from prediction to knowledge when it becomes true, and from prediction to falsehood when it becomes false.
— creativesoul
No. Very, very no. — Srap Tasmaner
Do you agree with all of the following?
1.)Anthropomorphism is when we attribute uniquely human kinds of thought and belief(those that are exclusively human) to things that are not.
2.)Some human thought and/or belief are exclusive to humans.
3.)Some human thought and/or belief are shared by other language using creatures.
4.)Some human thought and/or belief are shared by other language using creatures and language less ones alike. — creativesoul
I agree that - in the overall bigger evolutionary picture - anthropomorphism was inescapable. I disagree that it remains so to this day. — creativesoul
Whoa! Do I get some sort of prize for bringing this about? — Srap Tasmaner
I agree with all of this, at least in spirit, but you have to be careful about the position from which such a claim is made. We have to be able to say that what is cannot not be without falling into a modal fallacy of treating all truths as necessary. — Srap Tasmaner
MU's point is, I think, a little different: from our position in time, we can only "really" think of the past as fixed, so claims about what was or was not possible in the past, at a time before some event occurred or didn't, are inherently somewhat suspicious. — Srap Tasmaner
Best to recognize that I cannot reject that this is a bus when I already have experience of busses, which manifests as a blatant self-contradiction, in just the same way I cannot reject the feeling of moral reprehensibility, but without ever having the experience of an object by which a self-contradiction would arise. This is sufficient to prove feelings are not cognitions, from which follows that moral knowledge is a misnomer. Further support resides in the fact that I may know this is true now yet find later this is no longer known as true, a function of experience in which I must cognize something, but that for which I feel as moral will always be what I feel is moral, as a function of personality, for which no cognitions are necessary. — Mww
we should find that it is impossible to be dishonest with oneself. — Mww
Nobody but you uses "necessary" to mean "no longer possible". — Luke
This fails to answer whether the original event was necessary or merely possible in the first place. — Luke
Whoa! Do I get some sort of prize for bringing this about? — Srap Tasmaner
And that's not crazy: counterfactual reasoning is famously dicey; but it is just as famously indispensable — Srap Tasmaner
We have to be able to say that what is cannot not be without falling into a modal fallacy of treating all truths as necessary. — Srap Tasmaner
I’m pretty sure I’m not committing that fallacy, but I can see how MU most likely is. — Luke
Do you agree with all of the following?
1.)Anthropomorphism is when we attribute uniquely human kinds of thought and belief(those that are exclusively human) to things that are not.
2.)Some human thought and/or belief are exclusive to humans.
3.)Some human thought and/or belief are shared by other language using creatures.
4.)Some human thought and/or belief are shared by other language using creatures and language less ones alike.
— creativesoul
Nothing there is controversial except "other language using creatures"; I already asked you to identify which other animals you think use language. — Janus
I agree that - in the overall bigger evolutionary picture - anthropomorphism was inescapable. I disagree that it remains so to this day.
— creativesoul
Again I both agree and disagree depending on your definition of 'anthropomorphism'. — Janus
That our understandings are human-shaped is inescapable, but egregious uncritical projection of human attributes onto the non-human is avoidable.
we should find that it is impossible to be dishonest with oneself.
— Mww — Metaphysician Undercover
But then we need to give "possible" a position, because "possible" provides a truthful description. It appears like "possible" ought to be opposed to "impossible". But it also appears like "possible" ought to be opposed to "necessary". And those two are already opposed to each other, so the real problem begins. — Metaphysician Undercover
Modal logics define necessary and possible as a pair of operators that apply to propositions; either can be taken as primitive and the other defined in terms of that one, or you can just allow that you're defining the pair together; the interaction of the operators maps naturally to a number of ways of talking about modality (alethic, epistemic, physical, temporal, etc.), but can be defined purely syntactically without specifying a particular interpretation of the operators; a particular modal logic will usually by defined by axioms intended to capture the particular sort of modality desired, and those axioms will vary.
In particular, if we take the necessary operator ▢ ("box") as primitive, then the possible operator ◇ ("diamond") is defined as ~▢~, that is, not necessarily not. Similarly, the necessary operator is defined as ~◇~, that is, not possibly not. This pairing has been very fruitful in clarifying modal issues, and is at this point in the history of logic no more controversial than the standard quantifiers ∀ and ∃. (And in fact, it turns out that one very useful way to think of ▢ and ◇ is as a kind of restricted quantifier over possible worlds, which ought to be obvious because ∀ is ~∃~ and ∃ is ~∀~.) — Srap Tasmaner
I agree. — creativesoul
If it isn't clear, the interdefinability of such operators means you only need one of them, but using the pair is way more convenient, and foregrounds how common and important two particular ways of using such an operator are. In other words, we could get by with just ▢ for a modal operator, and we would find ourselves writing formulas with ▢~, and ~▢, as well as unadorned ▢, but we would also find that we were writing one particular little phrase all the time: ~▢~. Same is true for ∀ and ∃: if we just used ∀, we'd have to write ~∀~ all the time. — Srap Tasmaner
There's too much I disagree with here. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is some merit to your position though..... — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe that morality consists of judgements of good and bad, not feelings — Metaphysician Undercover
but there are many subtle forms of dishonesty, like withholding information. — Metaphysician Undercover
We are dishonest with ourselves in many subtle ways when we follow our feelings and proceed into doing what we know is morally wrong. Sometimes this amounts to what is called rationalizing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree. — creativesoul
Possible world semantics is fraught. — creativesoul
Logical possibility alone does not warrant belief. — creativesoul
Well, some species of primates use specific vocalizations as alarms for specific predators sighted in the immediate vicinity. It's also my understanding that not all communities of some species do this, or have the same vocalizations for the same predators.
That certainly seems like a case of naturally emerging language use to me. — creativesoul
Humans do it more deliberately, for the sake of sounding the alarm. — creativesoul
could you rephrase the following...
...understandings are human-shaped... — creativesoul
we should find that it is impossible to be dishonest with oneself.
— Mww — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree. — creativesoul
Only humans, as far as is known, are capable of symbolic language and linguistically mediated thought. — Janus
A dog might be able to ask for food, but it can't ask to be fed next Tuesday. — Banno
Animals don't do the "...counts as..." thing that we do as a matter of course. — Banno
Don't they? Doesn't just about every living organism? Counts as food. Counts as protection. Counts as scary predator. Counts as my territory. Counts as invader. — Srap Tasmaner
Suppose you are selling tea, and a customer offers to trade a blank piece of paper for a cuppa; You would presumably refuse; but if that piece of paper is a $5 note you might accept. In what exactly does the difference between these two pieces of paper lie?
The difference is in the status of the note in relation to our shared intentional attitudes. It is our collective attitude that gives some pieces of paper a special role. The paper counts as $5; it has a status function.
Again, it is not my intention alone that makes the paper a note; it is our intention, together with all the background paraphernalia of banks and credit and so on, that makes it a fact that the note is worth $5.
Or consider your car. You exchanged funds for it, signed the appropriate paper, have suitable documentation; and as a result you may within certain guidelines do with the car as you please. If someone else takes the car without your say so, then you have certain rights and may make a claim against them.
That is, you own the car. And you do so as a consequence of our collective intent, that certain things count as your property under specified circumstances. Your ownership is a status function. And it exists because of our collective intent.
That the bishop stays on the same colour is a result of its status as a bishop. Where it to move down a file, it would cease to count as a bishop. That Zelenskyy is Ukraine's President is status function; he counts as President as a result of our shared intentionality.
A status function is created by a declaration similar to
X counts as Y in C
Money counts as legal tender in our economy; This piece counts as a bishop in chess; Zelenskyy counts as the Ukraine's president in Ukrainian government.
A status function requires collective intentionality; and it is had not as a result of some physical structure, but as a result of our collectively imposing and recognising that status.
You might notice the relation to declarative utterances. A declarative makes something the case by declaring it to be so. Recall that declaratives are curious in having two directions of fit: a declaration sets out how things are, yet how things are changes to match the declaration. — Banno
They don't get to decide what is or is not food. It's food or it isn't, it's a mate or it isn't. So no.
We get to say that this counts as Tuesday, that counts as money, and so on. — Banno
Recall that declaratives are curious in having two directions of fit: a declaration sets out how things are, yet how things are changes to match the declaration. — Banno
Don't they? Doesn't just about every living organism? Counts as food. Counts as protection. Counts as scary predator. Counts as my territory. Counts as invader. — Srap Tasmaner
Of course, evolution is a cheapskate, so it gave the beetles a really crappy mate selector that was just good enough until it was foiled by the arrival of brown beer bottles — Srap Tasmaner
A shame, since it is right. it's just that we get to decide what counts as a simple. — Banno
Donald Hoffman has a lot to answer for. — Tom Storm
I wasn't talking about what counts as a simple or what counts as anything else, so I don't know what you are referring to with that. — Janus
it's just that we get to decide what counts as a simple. — Banno
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