Beliefs are propositional attitudes, and as such can be put in the form: M believes that p for some proposition p and some believer M. — Banno
Show me. — creativesoul
Do you see a problem with that? — Banno
S has an attitude towards the broken clock. — Banno
Earlier we agreed that S's attitude was towards the broken clock. Broken clocks are not propositions. — creativesoul
I still don't see how.I'm saying that this and other examples show the inherent inadequacy in the conventional understanding of belief as propositional attitude as well as the belief that approach. — creativesoul
I don't. Trip to Bunnings, then a couple of meetings and seedlings to plant out. Maybe in between.I've a bit of time tonight, so... — creativesoul
Earlier we agreed that S's attitude was towards the broken clock. Broken clocks are not propositions.
— creativesoul
Sure, the clock is not a proposition, nor an attitude. . But "The clock is broken" is a proposition, and to believe that the clock is broken is to adopt an attitude towards that proposition. — Banno
I'm saying that this and other examples show the inherent inadequacy in the conventional understanding of belief as propositional attitude as well as the belief that approach.
— creativesoul
I still don't see how. — Banno
what I'm pointing towards is the fact that no one would say so at the time. — creativesoul
There is the man who looks at a clock which is not going, though he thinks it is, and who happens to look at it at the moment when it is right; this man acquires a true belief as to the time of day, but cannot be said to have knowledge. — Russell, Human Knowledge: Its Scope and Limits
I don't see how. A believes that Banno is at x; B believes that Banno is at y; C believes that Banno is at z; and so on. Each has a different belief.Following the practice you've defended, five different people can believe that you are currently in five different places, but the practice in question will render them all as having the exact same belief about your spatiotemporal location. — creativesoul
Not following your point at all. — Banno
A believes that Banno is at x; B believes that Banno is at y; C believes that Banno is at z; and so on. Each has a different belief.
Not following your point at all. — Banno
According to the practice you're defending, all of them believe that you're not at w. — creativesoul
May I suggest attending to what I've written? — creativesoul
Maybe your position is not as clear as you suppose. — Banno
But someone who believed the clock was working would say that it was working. Not following you at all. — Banno
What's the point of specifying a time? — Banno
So, either S's attitude towards the broken clock - at time t`- was not a belief about the broken clock or not all belief is equivalent to a propositional attitude, because broken clocks are neither propositions nor attitudes. — creativesoul
Call me old-fashioned, but I think it would be helpful if creativesoul provided a compass like, "Banno believes X. I believe Y. X contradicts Y." — Leontiskos
You take belief to be some sort of mental furnishing, while I take it to be some sort of stopgap imputation used in explanations of intentional acts. — Banno
Why can't it be said that S had a propositional attitude towards the clock — Janus
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