Hi! I was hoping to get some clarification from a professional. Did Frege think propositions were thoughts? Abstract objects, but basically thoughts? — frank
Now you are getting into metaphysics, I was told that this shan't be done for this discussion. — schopenhauer1
I don't think abstract object implies any ontological commitment. It just means it's not a physical thing, but it's not a mental object like if you're picturing a flower in your mind. An abstract object is something I could be wrong about, for example if I say that 2 squared is 5. — frank
Have you read the OP?
Frege says, “A proposition may be thought, and again it may be true; let us never confuse the two things.” (Foundations of Arithmetic)
— J
Here is IEP:
For this and other reasons, Frege concluded that the reference of an entire proposition is its truth-value, either the True or the False. The sense of a complete proposition is what it is we understand when we understand a proposition, which Frege calls “a thought” (Gedanke). Just as the sense of a name of an object determines how that object is presented, the sense of a proposition determines a method of determination for a truth-value.
— Frege | IEP — Leontiskos
Why would that not be ontological? You are literally discussing someone's understanding of what an object is. — schopenhauer1
Hi! I was hoping to get some clarification from a professional. Did Frege think propositions were thoughts? Abstract objects, but basically thoughts? — frank
I don't think those two quotes speak against the claim that Frege is equating propositions with thoughts in the specific sense in which he understands the latter. — Pierre-Normand
I get that. It's just that when I've tried to pin down the ontological significance of "abstract object", the answer seems to be that this question doesn't need to be answered. We're more in the realm of just identifying what we can't do without. — frank
Frank is just trying to uphold his idea that in "real life" we don't talk about unasserted declarative sentences, without actually going through the work of defending it. — Leontiskos
If "thought" is understood in a specialized sense then, sure. Again, my point is that these invisibly specialized senses of "proposition" and "thought" are not getting us anywhere. — Leontiskos
You appear to be agreeing that we can't have unasserted propositions in real life, even if the assertion is only hypothetical or potential. — frank
If, for example, propositional thinking is said to be part of the human animal, that needs to be explained. — schopenhauer1
We might say that Frege thereby secures the essential connection between logic as a formal study of the syntactic rules that govern the manipulation of meaningless symbols in a formal language and the rational principles that govern the activity of whoever grasps the meanings of those symbols. — Pierre-Normand
I don't think those two quotes speak against the claim that Frege is equating propositions with thoughts in the specific sense in which he understands the latter. The quote in Foundations of Arithmetic seems meant to distinguish the thinking of the thought from its being true. — Pierre-Normand
Well, I think this avoids the force of my point a bit. Frege said, "A proposition may be thought..." He did not say, "A thought may be thought..." There are apparently good reasons why he didn't use the latter formulation, and they point a difference between a proposition and a thought. Specialized senses can "solve" this, I suppose, at least up to a point. (Nor am I convinced that IEP is using 'proposition' in a non-Fregian way, but I don't want to get bogged down in this.) — Leontiskos
Well, it seems that when the notion of "force" is clarified, it doesn't do what Kimhi wants. He's reliant on ambiguity. But further, he seems not to consider the developments of logic and metalogic since Frege - and they are profound.(I) probably never should have wandered into speculations about different kinds or modes of “force,” even though Kimhi himself often seems to do that. — J
There's an old adage concerning someone complaining about geneticists studying fruit fly when elephants were so much more important. But you can get more fruit fly into a laboratory, and they breed faster, so it makes sense to work with them. What is learned can then be appleid to elephants, if needed. Fruit fly simplify the process so that certain aspects can be examined in detail. Formal logic does much the same thing, but with language. It models certain aspects in a way that can be examined productively. If Kimhi wants to understand elephants, he could do worse than to start with fruit fly."Does a strong formalism such as Frege's invalidate whatever can be said or thought about p in ordinary language?" — J
Would you say an AI can assert a proposition? Or are we just treating it as if it can? — frank
it also is liable to send us off into tangential directions regarding the specific nature of current LLM-based AI agents, the issue of their autonomy (or lack thereof), their lack of embodiment (and the issue of the empirical grounding of their symbols), how they are being individuated (as machines, algorithms or virtual agents in specific conversation instances), to what extend their assertions have deontic statuses (in the form of commitments and entitlements to claims), and so on. — Pierre-Normand
I'm not seeing that as tangential. I think it would highlight, especially for the naive, like me, the difference between a formal language where apparently there are propositions that aren't thought of as asserted in any way, and ordinary language, where the listener always thinks of what's being asserted in the light of who asserts it, or in what setting it's asserted. — frank
Maybe I misunderstand you but I don't see the distinction between a thought being merely entertained (or grasped) and it being asserted to line up with the distinction between (merely) formal and natural languages. — Pierre-Normand
Ascriptions of semantic content to the responses of LLM-based AI agents, and interpreting them as having assertoric force, is a matter of taking a high-level intentional stance on their linguistic behavior with a view of rationalizing it. — Pierre-Normand
I think that when you entertain a thought, you're imagining it as an assertion, even if there was no such event. For instance, if you contemplate "the cat is on the mat", in terms of thought, all you have is a sentence that could mean all sorts of things. It's not truth-apt. To the extent that meaning is truth conditions, it's meaningless. Am I wrong? — frank
And I think that's what we do all the time when we communicate. We rationalize. I don't think you can really see any meaning in the output of an AI unless you take it as having assertoric force. It's a reflexive part of communication.
It's hard to be sure, but there seems to be a profound misapprehension concerning what logic is, underpinning the Kimhi's work and much of the writing on this thread. I'm not inspired to go down that path. — Banno
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