I once saw you exclaim that the easiest way to win a disagreement with someone else(yourself at the time you said it) was to begin by misunderstanding it. — creativesoul
And I've replied several times, most recently withI've asked you several times to explain the proposition that S had an attitude towards at time t1 such that they believed it to be true. We agreed that S's attitude - at time t1 - was towards a broken clock. Broken clocks are not propositions. So, either S's attitude towards the broken clock - at time t1`- 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
...and tried to see what it is you are getting at, but I haven't been able to see it. You put me in the position of having to work out both what it is you are arguing and how to reply to it.At three o'clock, (there is a clock, that clock is broken, but S believes (that clock is accurate)). — Banno
Banno's law: the easiest way to critique some view is to begin by misunderstanding it. — Banno
Banno's account of my position on belief contradicts my own position on belief. — creativesoul
So, am I correct in thinking that you're claiming that S's attitude towards the broken clock at time t1 does not count as S believing that that particular broken was working? — creativesoul
Indeed, you believe both that x is broken and that S believes (x is not broken). There is no contradiction here.I'm simply claiming that at time t1 S believed that a broken clock was working. — creativesoul
"The broken clock" cannot refer to the clock in S's beliefs, because that clock is not broken. — Banno
There is only one clock. x.This looks suspiciously like unnecessarily multiplying entities. — creativesoul
Sure. I agree entirely.The clock in S's beliefs is the one they looked at, and it is most certainly a broken one. On this... I'll not budge. — creativesoul
Beliefs "emerge onto the world stage" as ways of expressing what folk hold as true, as opposed to what is indeed true. S beleives the clock to be broken when it isn't.Banno holds that belief is imputed/attributed to another creature as a means for explaining its behaviour. I do not disagree completely with that idea. We do just that and we do it quite often. It's just not an explanation for how belief emerges onto the world stage nor what belief consists of. — creativesoul
"The broken clock" cannot refer to the clock in S's beliefs, because that clock is not broken. — Banno
The clock in S's beliefs is the one they looked at, and it is most certainly a broken one. On this... I'll not budge.
— creativesoul
Sure. I agree entirely. — Banno
You claim that the clock in S's belief is both... broken and not. You first claimed that the clock in S's belief was not broken, then agreed entirely with me when I claimed in was. — creativesoul
...That just scratches the surface of the disagreement between Banno and myself. The differences between his position and my own are often tied to the respective notions of belief that we're working from. — creativesoul
Why can't it be said that S had a propositional attitude towards the clock; namely the belief that it was functioning. — Janus
But I am probably not honing in on the exact difference that Banno and creativesoul are meting out. — Leontiskos
There's an ambiguity here that can be expounded by getting the scope clear. It might be
There is a broken clock X and (S believes that X is not broken)
Do you see a problem with that?
Or it might be that
There is a broken clock X and S believes that (X is broken and not broken)
S is irrational or some such. — Banno
S holds that, "The clock is functioning," not that, "The broken clock is functioning." "Broken" does not enter into their intentional act. They do not hold a belief regarding a broken clock; they hold a belief regarding a (working) clock. They just happen to be mistaken.
But I am probably not honing in on the exact difference that Banno and creativesoul are meting out. — Leontiskos
Propositional attitude, psychological state usually expressed by a verb that may take a subordinate clause beginning with “that” as its complement. Verbs such as “believe,” “hope,” “fear,” “desire,” “intend,” and “know” all express propositional attitudes. — Janus
S's belief is about a broken clock. Do you agree? — creativesoul
It seems to me that you cannot accept this rendering because it pretty much mashes your account.The clock is broken and S believes (the clock is not broken)
There's an ambiguity about that, between the clock being broken and S believing it is broken. S's belief is about a clock, yes. But it's not, for S, a belief about a broken clock. As in, It's not true that "S believes that (the broken clock is not broken)"; but that, to get the scope right, "Of the clock, S believes (the clock is not broken) AND the clock is broken.
"The clock is not broken" has to stay within the scope of S's belief. And it seems to me that you miss this. — Banno
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