He’s being a little sarcastic, in my reading, but his meaning is clear: If we continue to allow p to float somewhere in the World 3 of abstracta, without acknowledging its dependence on thought1, we are going to get a lot of things wrong.
If “the I think accompanies all our thoughts” has been rendered uncontroversial, is it now also uninteresting, unimportant? This is a further question, which I’m continuing to reflect on.
Then it seems I was right; he only thinks in terms of assertions. He doesn't think of questions.Judgment is a fundamental activity of thought — Wayfarer
If “the I think accompanies all our thoughts” has been rendered uncontroversial, is it now also uninteresting, unimportant? This is a further question, which I’m continuing to reflect on. — J
Another further question is, How to understand all this in terms of self-consciousness? — J
If “the I think accompanies all our thoughts” has been rendered uncontroversial, is it now also uninteresting, unimportant? This is a further question, which I’m continuing to reflect on. — J
It must be an error to suppose that thought, in order to be objective, must be of something other than itself — Sebastian Rödl
All that is objective, extended, active—that is to say, all that is material—is regarded by materialism as affording so solid a basis for its explanation, that a reduction of everything to this can leave nothing to be desired (especially if in ultimate analysis this reduction should resolve itself into action and reaction). But ...all this is given indirectly and in the highest degree determined, and is therefore merely a relatively present object, for it has passed through the machinery and manufactory of the brain, and has thus come under the forms of space, time and causality, by means of which it is first presented to us as extended in space and active in time. — Arthur Schopenhauer
So the I think = thought1? Such that Rodl's claim is, "The temporal event of thinking accompanies all our [Fregian propositions]." — Leontiskos
If the I think means only a temporal event of thinking, then what does it have to do with self-consciousness? What does it have to do with the self-reflective "I think"? — Leontiskos
My main distinction here (which I do think Popper would uphold) is between an event in time and the idea of a proposition’s being timeless, unspecific, “the same” no matter who thinks it, or when.
— J
Okay, but is this a real distinction or a mental distinction? — Leontiskos
The important insight is that, when someone argues that “the I think accompanies all our thoughts,” they are using both senses in the same sentence. We should translate this sentence as “When I think p (thought2), I must also think: ‛p’ (thought1).” Put this way, it shouldn’t even be controversial. You can’t propose or entertain or contemplate a proposition without also thinking1 it.
— J
This seems to go back to <what I said to javra>. — Leontiskos
Thinking p requires thinking p. No one disputes this. The question of the OP is whether thinking p requires self-consciously thinking p; whether it requires thinking "I think p." — Leontiskos
That is, the plural "thoughts" would capture two distinct Fregian propositions, but not the same Fregian proposition thought on two different days. — Leontiskos
"Fregian proposition". What's that? — Banno
Now that I am reading Self-Consciousness and Objectivity, it would help if you cited where you are quoting from. — Paine
I read the Schopenhauer passage as not confirming the Rödl statement. Was that your understanding as well? — Paine
It must be an error to suppose that thought, in order to be objective, must be of something other than itself — Sebastian Rödl
I did add page references in those notes. — Wayfarer
It must be an error to suppose that thought, in order to be objective, must be of something other than itself — Sebastian Rödl
Yes, that's my hypothesis. — J
Right, that's the natural next question. This is where Rodl's idealism comes in. He believes there's a great deal more to be said about the structure of thought1, the "I think". I'm still working on finding a clear and concise way of articulating his ideas here. — J
I don't think I understand this question. Could you say more? — J
I believe we can now see that there are subtleties and distinctions we need to make here. On the hypothesis of there being these two construals of "think/thought," the first quoted statement would be "Thinking2 p requires thinking1 p." But was your statement "No one disputes this" based on the observation that this is a pointless tautology, or were you aware of the different senses of "thinking p"? It reads to me like you were indeed making that distinction, and going on to raise the question of self-consciousness. But now what we must ask is, How would you divvy up the "thinks" in the next statement? The relevant bit is "whether thinking p requires self-consciously thinking p; whether it requires thinking "I think p". Rather than guessing, I'll just toss it to you. How would you disambiguate the various "thinking/thinks" here? — J
Yes, that's right. Can you say more about why (with the necessary disambiguations) this is problematic? I may not be seeing your point. — J
The I think must be able to accompany all my representations; — Kant, CPR, B131-133 (pp. 246-7)
Is someone expressing an opinion or fact when stating, "The oak tree is shedding its leaves"? — Harry Hindu
Just because it wasn't about the world doesn't mean it isn't part of the world. Does the Lord of the Rings book not exist in the world even though it isn't about the world?.............................You misinterpreting a sound causes you to behave a certain way in the world. How can there be a causal relation between some thought you have and an action in the world if those thoughts are not in the world? — Harry Hindu
What is the difference between a "belief", "think", and "knowledge" for you? — Harry Hindu
Ok, would you say that the structure of your thoughts is more like watching the movie or reading the book? If scribbles in the book invoke the images from the movie, would you say that the scribbles in the book refer to the actions and things in the movie? Could it ever be the other way around? If so, provide an example. — Harry Hindu
Seeing words can make us think of things, and kinds of things, no other visual experience can. Things that wouldn't exist but for language. Rhyming, for example. If their weren't words, we wouldn't open a wooden barrier in a hole in the wall, behind which is a large, tusked pig, and bloody, dead body, and think:For some reason, people seem to categorize words as having this special power or needing a special explanation that makes them separate from all the other visual experiences we have. I'm saying that is not the case. They are no different than any other visual experience you might have — Harry Hindu
If you know p, then you must be able to prove or verify you know p. How do you prove and verify that you know you think p? — Corvus
That would be a self knowledge with no possibilities of proof. Would it be correct?I know my hand hurts regardless of whether I can prove or verify it to someone else. — RussellA
That would be a simple task in proof. You go out to the garden at night when the Moon is shining, you point to the Moon and say, I know the Moon exists. There is the Moon.I know that I think the moon exists regardless of whether I can prove or verify that I know that I think the moon exists. — RussellA
"Fregian proposition". What's that? — Banno
The basic drift is that formal ideas - arithmetical proofs for instance - are true regardless of being judged so by anybody. They are in the 'third realm' of timeless truths which exist just so, awaiting discovery. It is at the nub of the argument. — Wayfarer
[Thought is] objective content that is capable of being the shared property of many. — Frege, 32n
It must be an error to suppose that thought, in order to be objective, must be of something other than itself — Sebastian Rödl
An example of a real distinction would be the Platonic model where there are real "Fregian" propositions and there are real temporal acts in which we leverage those propositions, such that there is a real distinction between thought1 and thought2 (i.e. a distinction in reality). An example of a mental distinction would be a model where there is only one (temporal) thought under two different guises; thought1 and thought2 can be distinguished mentally but these notions do not correspond to separate realities. — Leontiskos
there is a strong way in which thought1 resembles force and thought2 resembles content. — Leontiskos
What I am suggesting is that no matter how we rearrange the various senses of thought1/thought2, we won't get an answer to the self-consciousness question. This is because thought1 (event) and thought2 (Fregian proposition) do not possess the qualities necessary to generate conclusions about self-consciousness. — Leontiskos
It just feels very odd that this is what we mean by "thoughts" in that second sense. Note that for Kant:
The I think must be able to accompany all my representations;
— Kant, CPR, B131-133 (pp. 246-7)
..There is a possessive ("my"). A Fregian proposition is not possessed, being "timeless, unspecific, 'the same' no matter who thinks it, or when." When we talk about "my representations" or "my thoughts" we seem to be talking about things that are temporal, specific, appropriated by a subject, etc. This makes a lot of sense given that Kant is apparently saying that the I think (which involves self-consciousness) accompanies some thoughts1 but not others. — Leontiskos
Indeed, yes."I think I am" sounds like I am guessing I exist. — Corvus
I would put it a bit differently, but this is fine."I think therefore I am." indicates "I think" is the precondition or necessary foundation for "I exist". — Corvus
Because context matters. The same word or phrase can have wildly different meanings depnding on the full context on which they appear.So how can the same "I think" imply guessing, and also the solid reasoned precondition for the existence? — Corvus
They are different. The additional word "therefore" changes the meaning of the full sentence exactly as you just described.Or are they different "I think"? — Corvus
The “mental event” sense of “think” could be shown as “I think: ‛p’ ”. The propositional sense could be shown as “I think that p” or just “I think p”. Or we can just attach numbers to discriminate them: thought1 vs. thought2, think1 vs. think2. — J
Judgment is a fundamental activity of thought—when we make a judgment, we assert something about the world, such as "the sky is blue." Rödl is interested in the self-consciousness inherent in judgment: the way in which, whenever we make a judgment, we implicitly understand what it means to judge. This self-consciousness isn't an explicit, theoretical knowledge but an implicit, practical understanding embedded in the act of judging itself — Wayfarer
The validity of judgment, then, not only is objective; it is also self-conscious' — Wayfarer
His task is not to discover something new but to clarify and express the implicit understanding that makes judgment possible — Wayfarer
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