Since the world is all that is the case, it is also a collective story. That does not meant hat just anything goes. You will still burn your hand if you touch the boiling kettle. — Banno
If we have modeled imperfectly some detail of the hidden states, but we never encounter evidence that would encourage us to update our model, were we wrong? — Srap Tasmaner
can our model be properly said to supervene upon the hidden states? That is, can there be a change in our model without a change in the ("underlying") hidden states?
If the answer is "no," if our model is not so tightly coupled to the hidden states as that, what is the source of that relative freedom? And if our model is then, to some undetermined degree, independent of the hidden states, what entitles us to describe changes to our model as updates rather than just changes, which could, for all we know, be arbitrary, or, if not arbitrary, free? — Srap Tasmaner
There is nothing, it seems, that we can point to as "evidence" that is outside the model, not even surprise; surprise is not a fact, but part of our model of ourselves. — Srap Tasmaner
What becomes questionable is the claim that the "map" is not the territory but only a map, and the positing of a "genuine" territory out there, somewhere, that the "map" we wander around in is a copy of. That will surely strike most residents of the "map" as an article of faith. Anything can count as evidence for it, and nothing can count as evidence for it. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't think it will quite do to answer that "data underdetermines theory." What "data" there is, is not just theory-laden; it is crushed under the weight of the theory it's carrying on its back. It could, for all we know, be 100% theory. — Srap Tasmaner
(1) nothing entitles us to make any claim that there is such a true state, or to make any claim about how close our conception is to it, — Srap Tasmaner
We have a model that is, for all we know, 100% mistaken, and at the same time, for all we know, all there is and no model at all. — Srap Tasmaner
Before you post "pragmatism" and count that as a job well done, plan on explaining exactly how pragmatism answers any of the questions I asked, or shows the questions to be ill-conceived. — Srap Tasmaner
Because we could never be surprised to find that Aragorn was not king of Gondor, or that "Aragorn was king of Gondor" is false. Surely we know our collective fiction (which is the model, which is the world) in exactly the same way, and with the same level of surety, that we know Aragorn was king of Gondor. So, whence surprise? — Luke
Then the model is not equivalent to the world; there is a distinction between them. The world is not the model or a collective fiction, because the world can surprise us. — Luke
My point was that I'm not assuming, either. How am I begging the question — Luke
Since it is possible that our model could be false in at least some respects, and that we could be surprised, it follows that there is more to truth than a mere "collective fiction". — Luke
I take the position of redundancy to be that there are no matters outside of language, and that the model is equivalent to the world, whether that is your personal view or not. — Luke
I don't read your posts — SophistiCat
don't care what you think, so don't jump up and down trying to catch my attention — SophistiCat
What I was referring as proof was against the argument from Tzeentch that:
Everybody and their dog knew it wasn't going to be a repeat of 2014, and that the Ukrainians would be prepared. — Tzeentch — ssu
There should be no surprises if the world is the model because you claim that the model is a collective fiction. — Luke
I already answered the question of why there should be no surprises using your analogy with "Aragorn was king of Gondor". — Luke
Why should there be any surprises if the world is the model and the model is a collective fiction? — Luke
By that logic, you are also begging the question by assuming 'truth' does not refer to such hidden states. — Luke
You were one of those saying something "about there being 'nothing' outside of language". — Luke
there's just 'the stuff that kettles are drawn from'. — Isaac
inventing your own fabricated narrative that you then answer — ssu
I made it clear to you more than once that you are not worth my time. — SophistiCat
If the world is the model, then there should be no surprises. — Luke
it is possibile that our model could be false in at least some respects, and that we could be surprised, because you speak of the possibility of a better model. — Luke
Since it is possible that our model could be false in at least some respects, and that we could be surprised, it follows that there is more to truth than a mere "collective fiction". — Luke
No, I'm saying that redundancy conflates the two. If "p is true" means no more than "p" and there is nothing "outside" language, then I don't see how it is possible for the fiction to fail in its task. — Luke
That proposition is part of the "collective fiction" model and it's not possible that it could be false. — Luke
Since it is possible that our model could be false in at least some respects, and that we could be surprised, it follows that there is more to truth than a mere "collective fiction". — Luke
The only way Russia is going to the negotiating table is... — ssu
What Ukraine can do is — ssu
My guess is you would say that what makes one theory better than another is that it produces less surprises? — Luke
If the semantic content of expressions refers to a collective fiction, then how is surprise possible?
It is not possible that Aragorn was not king of Gondor, but it is possible that the kettle is not boiling.
That is, it is not possible that "Aragorn was not king of Gondor" is true, but it is possible that "the kettle is not boiling" is true.
Assuming one is fluent with the language/model, it is no surprise that Aragorn is king of Gondor, but it can be a surprise to find the kettle is not boiling.
If truth is no more than semantic content (i.e. if "p is true" is no more than "p"), then there should be no surprises. — Luke
Taking the notion a step further, while it is your expectation, it is another’s anticipation. You expect me to understand; I anticipate I will. And vice versa. — Mww
It's also true because an event occurred which was parsed as the kettle boiling. — fdrake
Effectively we're arguing about whether semantic content relates to appearance or phenomenon! — fdrake
what do you see as causing phrases to have semantic content that we can collectively relate to and are approximately constant between people in many circumstances? — fdrake
Would I be correct in stating that what can surprise this creature, as a hidden state, belongs to this normative functioning? Are hidden states thus bounded in this sense by the the aims of the organism in its niche? — Joshs
can we not consider language use as also normative practices of interaction with an environment that is itself ‘bounded’ by the purposes of the language user, even when they are surprised? — Joshs
Do the words merely hook onto and describe an action, or are the words themselves actions , normatively guided forms of doing that aim to change an environment in anticipated ways that can be disappointed or invalidated as well as affirmed by the feedback from the environment they alter? — Joshs
Agreement would be equally about material practices that are intrinsic to word use. Our words are not just accountable to the linguistic conventions of the group , but are directly accountable to the feedback from the modifications of material circumstances our words enact. — Joshs
I'm not sure what your point is. — ssu
Kettles don’t boil, even though that is the linguistic and therefore logical construct presented in the dialectic, which necessitates the unstated presupposition in order to validate the argument. — Mww
I think it may be "eternally" true to say "I boiled the kettle on the 3rd of March 2022", since I did indeed boil the kettle on that day. — fdrake
it's really weird to make statements like "The kettle boiled and I poured cold water from it immediately"/ "The kettle boiled and the water stayed still". You convey an expectation of behaviour and then negate it; the meaning of the sentence part "the kettle boiled" is in conflict with the second bit precisely because the first bit doesn't necessarily fix all the events around it, or which can be embedded in relevant descriptions of causal chains involving it, but nevertheless constrains expectations of other sentence parts. — fdrake
As a rough summary by example, ""the kettle is boiling" is true" makes sense at its level of descriptive granularity because: ( 1 ) the definite article "the" picks out a specific kettle in the environment ( 2 ) that kettle is individuated from its environment by parsing it into salient objects with distinct patterns of behaviour ( 3 ) "is boiling" states a type of environmental pattern the kettle partakes in ( 4 ) under our level of demarcation, it's "only" the kettle that could boil, not the electrical currents or the plug socket despite both partaking in the boiling process ( 5 ) the kettle exhibits the parsed expectations which constitute (somewhat fuzzily!) boiling ( 6 ) that makes "the kettle is boiling" true. — fdrake
I thought we were discussing what "is true" does, not what "X" (or "the kettle" or "the kettle is boiling") does. — Luke
Here's a link to a post of mine about this. If you clink on that link, it takes you right to what I said. In this context, we could say it refers to what I said. Following that link is how you get the job done of finding out what I said. — Srap Tasmaner
I think that's part of what makes semantic content work through; it holds environmental objects equivalent through how we access them, how they function, and how we expect them to respond to manipulation. — fdrake
For semantic content be informative about an object's state, there must be an association between that object's state and the language about the object. — fdrake
Understanding those functional roles is accurate when it mirrors the developmental trajectories of the kettle, so when someone says "the kettle is boiling", it's true to say that when the kettle is boiling... Because the switch was flipped and the water was boiling etc... Something happened to make it true in context, and the pattern of language tracks the properties through shared expectations of environmental development. The association becomes a causal history of interacting environmental events and language. — fdrake
The causal history; making event-patterns of language co-occur with event-patterns of environments; means both reciprocally inform, and in many use cases reciprocally co-determine - we make our environments navigable and manipulable. — fdrake
Semantic content is then a historically informed behavioural expectation of the environment, whose developmental trajectories are demarcated through current and prior expectations of development. The causes in the present in both language and the world resemble the causes in the past - the former is a criterion of iterability (like the private language argument against privation), the latter is a criterion of publicisability (like the private language argument against the beetle's wiggling being determinative of sense). — fdrake
The causal patterns of language use grow to resemble the environment modulo perceptual individuation. Feedback lets the former and the latter have reciprocal impact; so much so that in many circumstances we can append "I think" to to a phrase, like "I think the kettle is boiling" and convey the same behavioural expectation of the environment but indexed to an agent. But the distinction between the two is precisely useful because the environment's patterns are shared. The causal histories differ, so the behavioural expectations in the environment and in language differ, so the meanings differ. One is true when you think it, one is true when the kettle boils.
The mirroring+coupling of causal patterns of language use and environmental comportment/expectations of development is what sets up the remarkable agreement obtained on whether the kettle is boiling... When it is in fact boiling or not. The causal history of language and environment over time, through constant work and tailoring, becomes discriminative on both environment and language. — fdrake
I think where we differ is that I interpret the pragmatic context as part of the function, and the function itself isn't situated within a body, it's situated between bodies, in the environment, and within bodies - like with Srap Tasmaner 's comment about externalism vs internalism of semantic content. I don't think "the science" sides with either side on that, at least not yet, so it remains a site of substantive philosophical disagreement. — fdrake
all that's wrong: knowledge doesn't have parts, not truth, not belief, despite entailing both truth and belief; and the explanation of action solely in terms of narrow conditions, as the internalist would have it, is weaker than the explanation of action in terms of wide conditions, as the externalist would. — Srap Tasmaner
The upshot here is that you successfully refer to the kettle in the kitchen despite possibly holding a false belief about it, perhaps many (what brand is it? when did you get it? didn't you have to replace it and this is the new one, or was that a different kettle?) and your intention should be taken, in proper externalist fashion, to be toward the actual object, not toward your possibly mistaken idea of the object. — Srap Tasmaner
You can successfully refer to George Washington even if everything you think you know about him is false. — Srap Tasmaner
The kettle is not just any vessel for boiling water, but the one in the kitchen, the one you mean, the one you have an intention toward. — Srap Tasmaner
You don't have intentions toward any such idea -- that's the lesson above -- but toward what you have ideas about. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't know the kettle has been fixed, though I have a true belief that it has been fixed. That's epistemic luck. I handle the kettle as if it's been fixed and have no trouble; I might even attribute my successful endeavors with the kettle to my having fixed it, even though our assumption here is that it would have made no difference if the kettle had still been unfixed. — Srap Tasmaner
Admiration for the screw example. It makes it so clear that what counts as a part of the kettle is up to us. — Banno
the truth of a sentence often depends on more than just its meaning; it often depends on a material object, or on a mental phenomenon, etc. — Michael
My suspicion is that there is a gap brought about by there being a difference in kind between neural networks and truth statements. — Banno
In more Wittgensteinian terms, there is an active intent that makes the kettle a kettle. The kettle exists as a result of our treating it as such; which is not to deny that our intent is constrained, Isaac's hidden states. But it is constrained by the kettle; that seems to be what we have decided to call some of the hidden states.
So, Isaac, perhaps those states are hidden from our neural nets, but not from us — Banno
I take it that Isaac has a strong position that they're linguistic all the way down and what they count as publicly is what they are, and the reference mechanism actually references an entity conjured up by collective agreement rather than some concrete fact. The referent of "the kettle" is a collectively enacted categorisation of the environment, rather than some environmental object. — fdrake
Let's say that the kettle is boiling is true, what would the proximate cause of that expression's truth be? My intuition for that is that the kettle really did boil. I think Banno, @Srap Tasmaner and @Michael would agree (though possibly for different reasons), though I suspect @Isaac would have a strong quibble. — fdrake
If, for instance, that screw holds one end of the handle in place, you know whether and how the handle can be used. It will be important for me to have that knowledge too in order to put the kettle on. (I have a dozen or so possible scenarios in my head now, but I assume you don't need any of those spelled out.) — Srap Tasmaner
the fact that there are multiple options doesn't mean you didn't have something specific in mind — Srap Tasmaner
If every object we were concerned with carried a UUID, and we could keep track of those, we could use those to end up in the same place. — Srap Tasmaner
The truth value changed because I painted the kettle red. — Michael
If we want an ephemeral, relativist 'truth', then sure we could compare the 'kettle' of any given conversation to the 'black' in that same conversation. — Isaac
you're rejecting my claim that the sentence "the kettle is black" means the same thing at T1 and at T2 — Michael
If it's not me painting the kettle red that changes the meaning then what does change the meaning? — Michael
Are you saying that me painting the kettle red changes the meaning of the sentence "the kettle is black"? — Michael
The meaning of the sentence "the kettle is black" didn't change at T2 — Michael
its truth value depends on — Michael
You agreed above that we can decide what words mean. So, for the sake of this example, we decide that the screw in the draw is not part of the kettle, and to use a spectrophotometer to measure the kettle's colour, agreeing which range of results indicates the kettle being black and not-black. — Michael
you posit a stable neural network, or some such thing, as a stable "thing", which would support repetition of the same, or similar mental activity, constituting the thing which others might call a "belief". — Metaphysician Undercover
For the sake of argument we have fixed the referent of the phrase "the kettle" (and "black", and "red") such that the truth value of "the kettle is black" is unambiguously true at T1 — Michael
The meaning of the sentence didn't change at T2 but its truth value did. Therefore, the truth value of the sentence depends on more than just its meaning. — Michael
The sentence "the kettle is black" is true at T1. I paint the kettle red at T2. The sentence "the kettle is black" is false at T1. — Michael
if it is so identified, identified by the use of language, and by our forms of life more broadly, as the man said, then it is the thing in that sense identified by our use of the expression "the kettle". — Srap Tasmaner
If it's not, then there has been no collective identifying of something by use of the expression "the kettle". — Srap Tasmaner
But it's still the case that whichever matter we decide 'counts' as being the kettle must exist for the sentence "the kettle exists" to be true. — Michael
That's for us to decide. — Michael
Did I? Where? — Michael
Any nonlinguistic feature? — Isaac
Sure — Michael
was a mistake. — Michael
A sentence like "the kettle is black" isn't made true by another sentence, but by the existence of a particular material object — Michael
still requires that there is something in addition to the sentences "it is raining" and "the kettle is black" for these sentences to be true. Truth depends on more than just language. — Michael
Therefore, there are no boiling kettles outside of language, either? — Luke
The kettle itself — Luke
I don't believe there's much controversy about what a kettle is. — Luke
Boiling point — Luke
Redundancy without realism leads to relativism and a disconnection of language from the facts of the world. If you accept realism, then you also accept some form of facts, correspondence and truthmaking. — Luke
what is the point of testing a theory in science? — Luke
kettle being black depends on the existence of particular particles at particular locations in space. This has nothing to do with language (even if language is required to talk about it). — Michael
the kettle being black depends on the occurrence of a particular sensory experience — Michael
get wet when I stand out in the rain — Michael