I personally consider them to be somewhat independent — Luke
once they have occurred they are in the past. Your example does not appear to indicate otherwise; the cup falls and then “unfalls”. — Luke
So, is my notation correct? — Michael
Seems straight forward to me. — creativesoul
If gambling had an equal payoff:risk ratio for each group then the sum gain for each group as a proportion of their investment, would be the same. So each group would, in sum, get x% richer. But that's not what we see, because the gap between the two groups even in relative terms, is getting bigger. — Isaac
But we're the blind leading the blind here. — Isaac
gambling — Isaac
bankruptcy — Isaac
If the risk were genuinely matched to the reward they'd be, on average no better off as a group yhsn they started. — Isaac
owners have broad portfolios — Isaac
However, in general owners lose more when a company goes belly up
— Count Timothy von Icarus
...but I see no evidence of this. I mean, generally owners are the rich and workers are the poor. — Isaac
If the owner is normally taking such a big risk, then there'd be as much incentive to cautiously share that risk as there would be to recklessly bet the house on it. — Isaac
I've been at pains to say that we're only talking about implication not literal meaning.
— Srap Tasmaner
Then I'm not sure what relevance it has to the discussion. — Michael
But we’re not just interested in what people mean by what they say.
— Srap Tasmaner
Why not? If "I'm not certain" means "I don't know" then "I know but I'm not certain" means "I know but I don't know" which is, of course, a contradiction. So it doesn't make sense to say "I know but I'm not certain".
And if it doesn't make sense to say "I know but I'm not certain" then it shouldn't make sense to say "I can know without being certain". — Michael
it is also the case that "It might be in the car" implicates (but does not entail) "I don't know for sure where it is"
— Srap Tasmaner
No, the speaker might know that the book is in the car but choose to be coy, though literally honest and correct, in saying "The book might be in the car". If I was looking for the book, then I would not appreciate my friend being coy that way, but he would not be logically incorrect. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If I candidly assert an indicative sentence, I imply that the content of my belief is represented by that sentence
— Srap Tasmaner
Yes, you imply it. But that asserting a sentence implies something isn't that that sentence (or assertion) means that thing. [ ... ]
This is where I think you're conflating different senses of "meaning" or "expression". — Michael
You can't assert that the book is in your room, or that you believe the book is in your room, and that it is not true that the book is in your room.
— Srap Tasmaner
Sure I can: I believe that the book is in my room but the book isn't in my room. I can assert anything I like. — Michael
It's simple that the poster is nuts to think that "Possibly P" implies "Not P". — TonesInDeepFreeze
A psychologist, not very well disposed toward logic, once confessed to me that despite all problems in short-term inferences like the Wason Card Task, there was also the undeniable fact that he had never met an experimental subject who did not understand the logical solution when it was explained to him, and then agreed that it was correct. — same wiki page
↪TonesInDeepFreeze The sad thing is that your clear explanation will not correct the confusion here. — Banno
I think you're conflating two different senses of "meaning" — Michael
I'm concerned with meaning in the sense of definition. — Michael
"I believe that the book is in my room" and "the book is in my room" do not share a definition. — Michael
Otherwise how do you make sense of the "the book is in my room" part of "I believe that the book is in my room"? The latter isn't to be interpreted as "I believe that I believe that the book is in my room". — Michael
I think you're just taking meaning-as-use to an irrational extreme. — Michael
"It can be true that I believe something even if what I believe is false" is something I believe. — Michael
The sentence that expresses that you believe it is "I believe that the book is in my room". — Michael
it can be true that I believe something even if what I believe is false. — Michael
Whether we're considering epistemic or alethic modality, if something is true then it is possible. — Michael
Therefore, your claims that the meaning of "the book is in my room" has something to do with what I believe, or that truth is honesty, are false. — Michael
"The book is possibly in my room" implies that I do not know where the book is. — Metaphysician Undercover
When you say that the book is possibly in your room, you imply that the book may be elsewhere.
— Metaphysician Undercover
But I'm not implying that the book isn't actually in my room. — Michael
So possibility is likely some sort of feature of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Depending on what you mean by "not actual", "possible" does mean "not actual". This is because the two concepts are mutually exclusive, inconsistent with one another, such that if something is truthfully said to be possible, it cannot at the same time be truthfully said to be actual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Truss reminds me of a quote Christopher Hitchens once made about David Cameron:
Q: What do you think about David Cameron?
A: He doesn't make me think.
— Manuel
That's from Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead.
Toohey: Mr. Roark, we're alone here. Why don't you tell me what you think of me? In any words you wish. No one will hear us.
Roark: But I don't think of you. — Michael
there is no opposite to "possible". And to use "impossible" as the opposite to "possible" is to stray from the definition "what may or may not be". — Metaphysician Undercover
I use a different definition, but the ends are the same. — Mww
Is there any verb that isn’t fractive [ sic ]? How would One become apparent to me? — Mww
Chuck Norris doesn’t go hunting — that implies the possibility of failure. Chuck Norris goes killing.
And.....what benefit in them is there for me? — Mww
I'm not saying the actual world is no longer a world. It's still a world just like the box with the X is still a box. — Metaphysician Undercover
The X signifies that the box is not in the same category as the unmarked boxes, just like "actual" signifies that the world is not in the same category as the possible worlds. — Metaphysician Undercover
I never used "impossible", you are putting words in my mouth — Metaphysician Undercover
It is a common misunderstanding to think that impossible is the opposite of possible. — Metaphysician Undercover
in knowledge-first terms, Alice knew that it was raining because she looked out the window and saw that it was raining.
— Andrew M
In knowledge-first terms, I know it is raining because I already know what it is to be raining. — Mww
I know what is true because I already know what it is to be true. I know what is true because I already know what truth is. — Mww
What's strange here is that I accept that "I am certain" doesn't mean "I know" but it does seem to me that "I am not certain" does mean "I don't know". I suppose ordinary language just isn't always consistent. — Michael
we'd take a bunch of boxes, and assign the same value to each of them, "possible". Then we take one, mark it with an X, and assign to it a special value, "actual". We cannot say that the one with the special value still has the same value as the others. — Metaphysician Undercover
So she believed that it was on the nightstand, but that belief wasn’t available to her? That just seems very farfetched. — Michael
I think it far more sensible to say that, at the time, she didn’t believe that it was on the nightstand, and so didn’t know that it was on the nightstand. Further prompting then elicited the memory, and from that spawned the belief and the knowledge. — Michael
You’re saying that at the time that I believed that the pint was mine I knew that the pint was Jane’s? I knew something that I believed was false? — Michael
Unless you want to say that she knew all along, despite not have the relevant justified true belief? — Michael
They were right, but does it then follow that they knew? — Michael
I know but I could be wrong? I was the one saying that last time and you spent days telling me that was nonsense. — Michael
What does "but I'm not certain" actually mean? It might be that when we tease this out we are confronted with the conclusion that "I'm not certain" actually means "I don't know". — Michael
it still needs to be explained what "I'm not certain" actually means, as it may very well lead to the same conclusion above; that "I'm not certain" means "I don't know". — Michael
The problem I see with the possible worlds scenario, is that if we assume possible worlds, and we want to assign "actual world" to one of them, then we need some principles to support the "actual world" as distinct from the others. Then, the actual world is a special world, and cannot be one of the possible worlds, because it has that special status which sets it apart as distinct. — Metaphysician Undercover
