The fact that “Michael wasn’t born in Germany because he was born in France” isn’t equivalent to “Michael wasn’t born in Germany” doesn’t mean that someone who believes the former doesn’t also believe the latter. — Michael
For your argument to work you must show that everyone who believes the former to be true doesn’t believe the latter to be true. You haven’t done that, and I don’t think you can.
Well, no. In order for my argument to work, I need to show that what you're claiming is S's belief is not equivalent to S's belief and that the difference between S's belief and your report is clearly shown by virtue of looking at the differences in what it takes for each to be true.
I can and have done that. — creativesoul
You haven't shown that someone who believes “Michael wasn’t born in Germany because he was born in France” doesn't also believe “Michael wasn’t born in Germany”. — Michael
"Michael was not born in Germany."
"Michael was not born in Germany, because he was born in France."
According to the argument you offered earlier, which of the above is an accurate report of S's belief regarding your birthplace? — creativesoul
S does not just believe that you were not born in Germany. — creativesoul
"Michael was not born in Germany."
"Michael was not born in Germany, because he was born in France."
According to the argument you offered earlier, which of the above is an accurate report of S's belief regarding your birthplace?
— creativesoul
Both. Someone who believes the latter also believes the former. They are not mutually exclusive. As I have said, you need to show that someone who believes the latter doesn't also believe the former. You haven't done that. — Michael
S does not just believe that you were not born in Germany.
— creativesoul
I do not just believe that Joe Biden is President. — Michael
"Michael was not born in Germany" is not S's belief. — creativesoul
You seem to be disagreeing about the criteria of identity of beliefs. But there are none, so far as I know. — Ludwig V
Your claim is that if (1) is true then (3) is false. — Michael
My claim is that if (1) is true then (3) is true. I think my claim is supported by common sense logic: (1) entails (2) and (3).
"I believe that Michael was not born in Germany because he was born in France but I do not believe that Michael was not born in Germany" is an absurd claim.
... there are no atomic propositions. — Ludwig V
The main objection that I levy against current convention is that the conventional notion of belief as propositional attitude cannot bridge the evolutionary gap between language and language less creatures' beliefs. — creativesoul
The main objection that I levy against current convention is that the conventional notion of belief as propositional attitude cannot bridge the evolutionary gap between language and language less creatures' beliefs.
— creativesoul
I agree that there is a problem about that, and that it is annoying. — Ludwig V
...one specific proposition gets its meaning from its relationship to the other propositions in the system... — Ludwig V
When you translate all of that into the context of belief or knowledge, it becomes something of a mess. — Ludwig V
I'm not altogether convinced by your way of handling it; it has admirable clarity and certainty, but I think it is too rigid to cope with the complexities of the language game with propositional attitudes, specifically the fact that the appropriate expression of a belief is affected not only by the believer, but also by the person uttering the sentence/proposition and by who is receiving it.
Whether you agree or not, I hope that is reasonably clear.
...one specific proposition gets its meaning from its relationship to the other propositions in the system... — Ludwig V
Does the farmer do all those things if he does not believe that that particular piece of cloth is a cow? I think not. I suspect you'd agree. How does focusing upon his actions tell us anymore regarding exactly what his(and all) belief are? — creativesoul
I'm also still curious about why you think my view is too rigid to cope with how the appropriate expression of a belief is affected by the believer, an author/speaker reporting the belief, and the reader/listener.
8 days ago — creativesoul
I think that this line of thought would be well served by introducing a bit more regarding how the relationship emerges, how the relationship persists, what the relationship consists of/in, what the relationship is existentially dependent upon, etc. — creativesoul
I don't understand what "how the relationship emerges" means. The relationship between propositions, belief and action isn't hidden. The relationship between the three persists for as long as S's belief persists. The relationship between belief and action is the relationship between reason for action and action and depends on the mental state of the believer - and, yes, that seems to conflict with my remark that it is not a question of the mental state of the believer. That remark over-simplifies the complex relationship between the mental state of the believer and the way that someone else may report it. — Ludwig V
I don't want to get in amongst the weeds of the Gettier problem, but there's a link between the last paragraph and Gettier and it sits behind that last paragraph. If S is justified in believing that p and p implies q, is S justified in believing that q? Even if if p is false? I want to say no, but I'm not sure I can. — Ludwig V
One thing that puzzles me is whether a belief that p implies a commitment to all the analytic implications of p. On the one hand, if S believes that p, it would seem that S must understand p - in some sense of "understand". On the other hand, it seems quite unlikely that most people understand all the implications of any proposition they believe. — Ludwig V
"Michael was not born in Germany" cannot stand alone as S's belief about Michael's birthplace. Current conventional practice leads to our claiming otherwise, and in doing so it also results in saying that all three individuals share the exact same belief about Michael's birthplace.
They - quite clearly - do not.
The only way to properly discriminate between the three individuals is to report their belief as Q because P, where P is any of the three beliefs written above. Upon doing so, we find Gettier's problem dissolved. Justified false belief is not a problem for JTB. — creativesoul
Well, that clarifies a great deal, and I agree that this dissolves the Gettier problem. — Ludwig V
Each belief, proposition, and sentence is clearly distinct from all other beliefs, propositions and sentences... — Ludwig V
...if you focus on "Michael was not born in Germany" and the fact that all three people would agree on that, you will think that they all have the same belief, and with reason. If you focus on the fact that they each have a different reason for believing that, you will think that they all have different beliefs, and with reason. So, I prefer to stick with what I have just said and refuse to adopt either that they do, or that they do not, have the same belief. — Ludwig V
I disagree with it at face value. Doesn't this hark back to atomic propositions? — creativesoul
How do we square that with the fact that they all hold mutually exclusive beliefs about Michael's birthplace?
Seems to me that belief as propositional attitude has been shown to be lacking in yet another way. Earlier it was found lacking the ability to take proper account of language less belief. I find that rendering all belief as propositional attitude has hindered our understanding. — creativesoul
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