When you look at a screw and decide to use a Phillips rather than a flathead screwdriver, you are inevitably appealing to "an ideal essence of the perfect tool for that task." — Leontiskos
But they do not disagree that logic is about validity, and that validity is about the preservation of truth. So what you say here is not to the point. — Leontiskos
Such as...? — Leontiskos
I dunno. It seems to me you simply misunderstood Searle, and double down when this is pointed out. Meh.What I am saying seems the most obvious thing in the world. — Leontiskos
Not a notion of which I have made use. I try not to deal in ideals......your ideal belief-relation... — Leontiskos
"Logics are theories of validity: they tell us, for different arguments, whether or not that argument is of a valid form" — Leontiskos
This is very interesting. I find myself wondering why "The right thing to do is apologise" should not have a truth-value. And so I find myself here somewhat at odds with Wittgenstein, and leaning towards Davidson.“(I believe) The right thing to do is apologize.” Now the personal claim of belief makes more sense here. The proposition is not true or false, nor can we be “wrong” about this proposition; — Antony Nickles
"The right thing to do is apologize", claimed Antony
"That's true", replied Banno.
I am not looking for an ultimate, correct and complete interpretation of belief in some formal language.
And I don't think Searle is, either. — Banno
To "It is impossible to exaggerate the damage done to philosophy and cognitive science by the mistaken view that "believe" and other intentional verbs name relations between believers and propositions" I might append "...in that they find themselves searching for that relation as if it were a thing in the mind, or worse, in the brain". — Banno
You seem to be making use of some as yet unstated transcendental argument, along the lines of the only way one account is better than another is if it is closer to the essence... — Banno
...what he says about his claim — Leontiskos
But that someone makes up a formal system that has nothing to do with truth and calls it 'logic' is not much of a counterargument. — Leontiskos
But logic is not merely rules for stringing symbols together. If I make rules for stringing symbols together I have not necessarily done anything related to logic. — Leontiskos
"have a certain logic to them...".☐☐◇☐☐◇◇☐☐◇◇◇
We can at the very least know that existence exists right now. — PL Olcott
...note that a single action can be described in various ways. Is he moving his arm up and down? Pumping water? Doing his job? Clicking out a steady rhythm? Making a funny shadow on the rock behind him? Well, it could be that all of these descriptions are true. — SEP: Anscombe
What kinds of 'law'... — Wayfarer
How can it not follow? — Wayfarer
I don't see how that follows.i.e., are instances of physical causation — Wayfarer
What's that, then?non-essential cause — Hanover
A lot of the confusion in this thread is addressed in the SEP article. — Leontiskos
