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
Could I be said to have known it all along? — Janus
Yes. — Srap Tasmaner
The main thing is to recognize when propositional attitude verbs are factive. If I remember that today is Joe's birthday, then today is Joe's birthday. When I see that a package has been delivered, a package has in fact been delivered. If I regret leaving my car window down, it's down. — Srap Tasmaner
I would call the passage from ignorance to knowledge learning. You learned your mother's name from her or from someone else who knew it. On your usage, by remembering you would learn your mother's name (again) from someone (yourself) who doesn't know it. — Srap Tasmaner
Did you come up with this usage of "know" yourself? — Srap Tasmaner
Yes of course, there is a big difference. To expect is to think of a future event, that it is likely. A belief is a strong conviction concerning what is. — Metaphysician Undercover
just turn the key, with the expectation that the engine will start, anticipating. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you mean, why do I think knowledge is, at least relatively, persistent --- I'm not quite sure what to say. I could say (a) it's part of our concept of knowledge for it to be persistent (not my favorite argument) or (b) there's an embarrassment of evidence that knowledge persists, for varying durations, certainly, but it's not ephemeral like perception; and maybe (a) derives from (b). — Srap Tasmaner
Are you a citizen only when you're showing your passport? Do you know how to ride a bike only while you're actually on a bike? Do you know your mother's name only when you're using it in a sentence? — Srap Tasmaner
Except, remember that by stipulation I don't know what he said, so what am I remembering? If I recreate his words from something, what is that something? I don't mean that as question for neuroscientists; it can obviously be that too, but for us, it needs to be something that's capable of engendering knowledge. That's the whole point of this, to say that there are these separate instances of knowledge and I create a new one when I need it. How do I do that? — Srap Tasmaner
The assumption is that the world of a lion is different enough, i.e., it's ability to think and use concepts would be so different from our own, that understanding the lion would be a great challenge, if we could understand at all. That's my take. — Sam26
I don't see our "forms of life" as being incommensurate, but as having a family resemblance. Although, with the lion example, I do see it as being incommensurate. We don't share much in common with a lion's form of life, which is why we wouldn't understand a lion if it could talk. — Sam26
I've just never found this compelling. I always immediately think of cases where people are as confident as they can imagine being, what they would naturally describe as "certain," and they're wrong, or cases where someone nurses unwarranted doubts about knowing what they do indeed know. — Srap Tasmaner
Academia is like a sewer: what you get out of it depends on what you put into it. — Bitter Crank
Even if you want to say, as I've been inclined to lately, that knowledge is not a kind of belief but a "first class" mental state in its own right, distinct from belief -- which is enough to keep our positions from conflicting -- we may still want to say that knowledge entails belief. (I'm undecided, but I see the appeal.) If S knows p, then S believes p -- and that can be true even if you don't analyze knowledge as belief + some other stuff. — Srap Tasmaner
but because the inseparability of model and world means that there are as many empirical worlds as there are models. — Joshs
Suppose we do not have access to the neighbourhood, but instead only to the models of the neighbourhood. — Banno
How do we(or you) avoid anthropomorphism? — creativesoul
Perhaps you would find it helpful to adjust your expectations regarding what we can do with language. — creativesoul
In the bottom quote above you are doing what you said we could not do in the top quote. — creativesoul
If the world is a collective representation, why can it not be false. — Janus
I'm not saying the world as a whole could be false, but that even some things which are taken to be facts might turn out to be inconsistent with subsequent experience. — Janus — Tate
This, my friend, is garbled. I think we're done here. — Tate
You made the mistake of asserting that the world can somehow be false. By definition, it can't.
It went down hill from there. — Tate
The RHS is a linguistic expression that can be in accordance with, correspond to, this collectively represented world or not. — Janus
Remember the RHS is not to be thought of in this context as a linguistic expression,. — Janus
You can't seem to make up your mind. — Tate
I'm quite familiar with use/mention. Your account of the t-sentence is garbled. — Tate
If you tried making sense, maybe I'd under you a little better. — Tate
That's the bit directly above that seems to be untenable in the same way that Kant's Noumena is. — creativesoul
You can't seem to make up your mind. — Tate
Then what's the LHS? — Tate
Not necessarily use against what you said so much as attempting to makes sense of how the 'actual world' posited earlier fit into the carving. You've also said that we don't see the world, but rather our perceptions, conceptions, impressions, and things of a nature which sound like a denial of direct perception. — creativesoul
Maybe. But I can say that Jabberwokies are tall hairy creatures with purple noses. I can instil in your mind the notion that one might reach for the word 'jabberwocky' on seeing such a thing. I can do all this without jabberwockies having to actually exist.
Your trigger and your response can both exist without the causal object existing. — Isaac
. It could be summed up with "truth and meaning are both prior to language". — creativesoul
So, I had no choice but to abandon the idea that a language less creature's belief could not be existentially dependent upon language, because some of them clearly are. — creativesoul
Yeah, so treating something as a Jabberwocky is what something's being a Jabberwocky is. Jabberwockies (or kettles, or tables, or teacups...) are not ready-made items, we construct them enactively, we interact with those hidden states and by our interaction construct those boundaries (between kettle and not-kettle). — Isaac
Ya, they're all sensory experiences. You're not saying it's all subjective are you? — Sam26
What's all perception? Are you referring to what we mean by truth? Sorry, I haven't read everything in the last three pages. — Sam26
Are you carving your initials into a tree or your perception, conception, and/or impressions? — creativesoul
Are you carving your initials into a tree or your perception, conception, and/or impressions? — creativesoul
Why not link the linguistic and the pre or non-linguistic, so that we can say it is not language per se that constrains and limits the intelligibility of the world, but each persons’s integrated history of understanding in general that ‘blocks’ some ways of thinking while enabling others? I would argue that the most important superordinate aspects of our ways of understanding the world, those with the greatest potential to limit what is intelligible to us, is often too murky to be linguistically articulated by us, and yet it drives our greatest hopes and fears. I would also add that our discursive schemes are only partially shared, which means that they are contested between us in each usage. Linguistic interchange doesn’t just assume what is at issue, it determines anew what is at issue in the interchange. — Joshs
This approach has the advantage of at least spelling out correspondence, I'd say. The world is, indeed, English-shaped (or concept-shaped, I suspect) so matching is a matter of equality (or perhaps another specifiable relation?) between the concept believed and the world. — Moliere
Then the world is something like a set rather than a place. It's the set of things that are taken to be facts?
The RHS is an element of this set? — Tate
Well said. The subtleties can be finessed.....but generally, well said. — Mww
If that were the case, then there would be no substantive difference between illusions of trees and perception of trees. — creativesoul
You posited an actual world then clearly stipulated a forbidden access/purchase to/upon that actual world. You then posited your experience as another entity completely unto itself as distinct from the aforementioned 'prelinguistic actual world'. If we have no access to that world, if our words cannot gain purchase upon it, then we cannot possibly compare anything to it.
In order to know the difference between the two, we must have access to both. You've already said that we cannot. That is a problem called untenability. — creativesoul
How can you know that if you cannot access it, if your perception and conceptions cannot have purchase on it? — creativesoul
You're saying the world is an idea. In what sense could it be false? — Tate
How else can you know that the one is not the other if not by performing a comparison/contrast between the two purportedly distinct things? In order to compare the two things, you have to know what they both are. The problem, of course, is that you've defined the one in such a way as to suggest that it is impossible to know.
The position reminds me of Kant's Noumena, or any other position that denies direct perception.
Earlier you said it was difficult to talk about these things. I found it to be much easier after abandoning those kinds of frameworks. — creativesoul
Can you rephrase that? I don't understand. — Tate
Would like to see a discussion on how the RHS relates to the world, and how it differs to correspondence. — fdrake
