I'm not following why you suggest a theory of language as a means to establish what language less belief consists of?
— creativesoul
What I had in mind was your mention of behaviorism. To me, behaviorism is clear on the right track, but too rigid, insufficiently sensitive to just how ridiculously verbal and inferential we are. So I offer a theory that is also wary of ye old ghost theory, while making plausible sense of the talky part of our doings. — Pie
Inferentialism makes a good case for building a theory on assertions. If irony is the trope of tropes, we get lots of mileage from a little spin on an assertion. We philosophers especially might want to consider how central inferences are in the lives of the 'rational' animal...and what are premises and conclusions ? How do we explain ourselves to one another ? To ourselves ? Inferences. — Pie
Above you suggest a box that cannot be looked into by others, an approach I consider to have been shown wanting. — Pie
...behaviour alone cannot always reliably inform us of anothers' thought and belief.
— creativesoul
I suggest inferentialism — Pie
The issue seems to be whether beliefs are best understood or not in terms of propositions. — Pie
I am quite curious to see exactly what you're going to do differently than me.
— creativesoul
Lately I find Sellar's myth of Jones illuminating. Note that Jones lives in a implicitly behaviorist society. They don't even think of themwselves as such, because it's Jones who first postulates 'internal speech' or 'talking without talking.' In the same way that the atomic theory could prove itself with increased powers of prediction and control, Jones' peers come to embrace thoughts as useful fictions. With practice, they even get good at guessing what they are thinking.
Now Jones could even extend his theory to creatures who never talk at all, explaining the beaver's movements in terms of its belief that food was waiting on the other side. Note that beliefs are still propositional] here, without us being committed to the animal 'having' them 'directly ' (inside their postulated ghostly consciousness.)
If a language less creature is capable of forming meaningful true belief, then meaning and truth are prior to language, and not all belief is equivalent to a propositional attitude.
— creativesoul
Another implicit premise here seems to be that languageless creatures can't have propositional attitudes. To me the question arises...how could we tell ? — Pie
Can we, locked in language, help but attributing such 'attitudes' in trying to understand such creatures ?
Again, this leads to saying that there is no meaning prior to language, that meaning is a language construct, that language is necessary for meaning, and/or that meaning is existentially dependent upon language.
Some language less creatures are capable of forming, having, and/or holding belief that is meaningful as well as true or false.
— creativesoul
Your view seems reasonable to me, but I prefer to use/understand some of your keywords differently. — Pie
The philosophers who want to find truth and meaning in full-fledged language are reacting to problems in their context, naturally trying to make sense of claims that a play a role in inferences --- of what they themselves, already at a high level of development, are doing.
I don't think philosophers must or even do insist that other understandings/uses of 'meaning' are invalid.
Some of them made serious mistakes. I'll grant you that readily. — Pie
what is concrete is what has immediate affective impact phenomenologically speaking, what affects us predominately in terms of being a sight, a sound, a smell, a taste, a bodily sensation, regardless of whatever story we might tell about the underlying machinery.
— Janus
Right, this is what I’ve characterized as the concreteness of bodily felt sensation. — Joshs
I think we’re taking about the same thing. What I’m claiming is that, in addition to this bodily sensation there is another aspect of feeling which is not concrete, not bodily and not a sensation
The absurdity of the question is readily apparent to anyone and everyone first hearing it.
— creativesoul
I grant that most people, even philosophers, see its practical nullity. But it really seems to be a big part of the tradition that we work from the ghost outward, with only the ghost truly, securely known, leaving all the rest a mere hypothesis, however likely.
So the challenge is to make its absurdity apparent to philosophers... — Pie
' Is there an external world? ' The challenge is making the absurdity of this question conspicuous. — Pie
The mind that matters, the mind that figures in reasoning and explanation, is not and cannot be radically private. — Pie
'Tell me about the world that no one can tell me about. See, it's impossible ! Henceforth idealism...' — Pie
Insofar as "self" is a binary concept: if there are not any others for the solipsist, then there isn't even a/the/"him" self to talk to. — 180 Proof
Try this for a line of reasoning. Descartes supposed he could doubt everything, and decided that he could not doubt that he was doubting, and hence that the doubter must exist.
Have a think about what it was he was doubting. To doubt is to doubt the truth of some proposition. But a proposition is an item of language. And there are good reasons to think that language must involve other folk - that there can be no private languages.
Hence in order to make use of propositions one must be part of a language community. The very doubting that Descartes made use of seem to already involve other people.
What do you make of that? — Banno
What you are doing is taking the constructed idealization we create ( the ‘tree’) , ignoring the fact that it is a combination of actual appearance, recollection and expectation, and then treating the derived idealization (the object we call ‘tree’) as if it were the true and actual basis of the name ‘tree’, and our job as perceiver is merely to accurately represent it as it is in itself.
— Joshs — creativesoul
In fact , everything to do with the concept of a spatial object requires a sequential process of construction. We don’t originally directly see objects as solid unities.. — Joshs
We concoct the idea of a unitary object like ‘tree’ from concatenations of memory, expectations and the meager data that we actually see in front of us. The notion of a tree as this thing in front of me is thus a complex synthesis of what we actually see... — Joshs
...what we remember and what we predict we will see... — Joshs
Most of the ‘tree’ is filled in this way. And the most important element is that we have to interact with the ‘object’ in order for it to exist for us. Animals deprived of the ability to move and interact with their surroundings do not learn to see objects. When we passively see a thing, we are understanding what it is in terms of how we can interact with it, how it will change in response to our movements. This is the standard model from developmental perceptual psychology. — Joshs
the notion of a tree is not the tree. We actually see the tree, not our notion. My notion of trees is not out in my front yard. The Kukui nut tree is though. What we believe about the tree is our notion. The tree is not equivalent to our belief about it. We can be wrong about the tree. The same is true of all that exists in its entirety prior to our picking it out to the exclusion of all else.
— creativesoul
We actually see an idealization or abstraction. Without our ‘notion’ filling in for what is not actually presented to us , in the form of memories and expectations, what we would ‘actually’ see is a disunified flow of perceptual phenomena, not the idealized object we define as a ‘tree’. — Joshs
What you are doing is taking the constructed idealization we create ( the ‘tree’) , ignoring the fact that it is a combination of actual appearance, recollection and expectation, and then treating the derived idealization (the object we call ‘tree’) as if it were the true and actual basis of the name ‘tree’, and our job as perceiver is merely to accurately represent it as it is in itself. — Joshs
No object simply exists for us as what it is outside of changing contextual relationships of sense.
Key words being "for us"... Does that include the toddler in the crib under the tree?
— creativesoul
If the toddler is young enough, they will not yet have attained the level of object permanence. To recognize an object as something which remains when we are no longer looking at it , or when it is covered up , requires a constructive process. — Joshs
it is on you to show that 'human experience' is not such a grouping (like 'cell') so as to support your claim that it's contents (both internal and external) is a fact of the world and not a fact of our language use. — Isaac
The notion of a tree as this thing in front of me is thus a complex synthesis of what we actually see , — Joshs
The tree is a group of cells, the cell is a group of organelles, the organelles are groups of molecules, the molecules are groups of atoms...
And all such groups are in constant flux, molecules from one group entering and leaving, becoming part of, and then excreted from...
And all such groups change over time such that their actual constituent parts are never the same... — Isaac
There's not a thing in the world which is not brought into being, from the heterogeneous soup of hidden states, by our conceptualizing, and constant reconstruction of it.
If I group some cows into 'herd1' the cows still existed prior to my naming them 'herd1' but whether daisy the cow was in or out of herd1 did not pre-exist my naming. — Isaac
The grouping did not exist in its entirety prior to your 'christening'. I'm talking about things that did. You're talking about things that did not. That's the difference.
— creativesoul
All things we name are such groupings. — Isaac
If I group some cows into 'herd1' the cows still existed prior to my naming them 'herd1' but whether daisy the cow was in or out of herd1 did not pre-exist my naming. I declared it to be the case by grouping the herd that way. — Isaac
Is there an external material world? (....) Such questions are the bane of philosophy. They are consequences of placing (...) the wrong kind of value upon consistent language use.
— creativesoul
What would the right kind of value look like? — Mww
The idea that all we have access to is our perception of the tree, and not the tree("Stove's Gem", it is often called) pervades academia to this day.
— creativesoul
It's strange.
For one thing, we could just grant that we don't know things as they are in themselves, adding also that we don't know what the hell it's supposed to mean to know something as it is itself. We understand (well enough) the idea of a warranted statement or a true statement. But knowledge of something as it is independent of knowledge is like the taste of ketchup without the flavor, or music that is 'better than it sounds.' What's the turn on ? The mirage of surprisingly easy eternal 'knowledge'?
Another thing, whether something is 'real' or an 'illusion' or 'true' is a fundamentally social issue. So there's something weird in reasoning about whether or not others exist in the first place. — Pie
The consideration I've been trying to coax some kind of agreement upon is that humans had experiences long before the term "experience" was coined.
— creativesoul
Indeed. — Isaac
But you additionally claimed that those experiences constituted both internal and external features.
The counter was that what experiences constitute depends on the definition being used.
If I see a tree, I am not passively observing hat appears to me, I am deconstructing it. And what I am deconstructing is not an object , — Joshs
...it is a way of relating to something,- me that way of relating never repeats itself identically from context to context.
When I use a word in front of someone else, their response establishes a fresh sense of meaning of that word. ‘Tree’ has an infinity of senses that depend exquisitely on the context of a shared situation. In a situation of usage of the word ‘tree’ I am not creating a new physical object , I am enacting a new pattern of relationship with it.
No object simply exists for us as what it is outside of changing contextual relationships of sense.
Words mean whatever a community takes them to mean, that's the gist. — Pie
Are you familiar with the later Wittgenstein? He argues that words do not refer to already existing objects. Strictly speaking , they do not refer at all. They enact relationships by altering prior relationships. If I see a tree, I am not passively observing hat appears to me, I am deconstructing it. And what I am deconstructing is not an object , it is a way of relating to something,- me that way of relating never repeats itself identically from
context to context. When I use a word in front of someone else, their response establishes a fresh sense of meaning of that word. ‘Tree’ has an infinity of senses that depend exquisitely on the context of a shared situation. In a situation of usage of the word ‘tree’ I am not creating a new physical object , I am enacting a new pattern of relationship with it. No object simply exists for us as what it is outside of changing contextual relationships of sense. — Joshs
...the name refers to a concept... — Metaphysician Undercover
A "cell" as commonly defined can be either a complete living organism, or a part of a living organism. How is it, that in some cases an entire living organism is "picked out" as a cell, and in other cases, a part of a living organism is picked out, and called by the same name.
One is an entire living organism, the other is not, yet they are both said to be the same independent thing, a cell.
Obviously, the term "cell"... ...is used to pick out two completely different types of things, one being a whole living organism, the other being a part of a living organism.
What we pick out with "cell" is up to us.
— creativesoul
Right. That's the point Janus and I have been trying to communicate.
What 'experience' picks out depends on how one uses the word. Could be internal, external, or both.
Just like the word 'cell' could pick out all the phagocytised proteins in the cell vacuole, some or them, of none of them. It all depends how we use the word. — Isaac
Is there an external material world?
If by "external" we mean not within the physical bounds of our skin, and by "material" we mean detectable stuff, then all we're asking is whether or not any detectable stuff not within the bounds of our skin exists.
Such questions are the bane of philosophy.
— creativesoul
Here's my version. At some point in the philosophical tradition (Locke or Kant or implicitly in Democritus even), it made sense to think of human experience as f(X)f(X) where XX is reality in the nude or raw or completely apart from us and ff is the universal structure or mediation of human cognition. The important bits of this insane but charming theory are that XX is impossible to access directly and that f(X)f(X) is private experience (plausible initially because we each have our own sense organs and brain, according to our sense organs anyway, which are in that sense their own product ? And the brain is the dream of the brain is the dream of the brain ? But we must carry on...). — Pie
"14th century humans had cells."
That's my answer.
— creativesoul
Good. Now what about the phagocytised or excreted proteins in the cell vacuole. Were they part of what makes up these 14th C cells or not? — Isaac
I think the point is that at that time, the word "cells" was not in use, nor was the concept which the word refers to. So at that time it is impossible that human beings had "cells" because there was no such thing as cells. — Metaphysician Undercover
Simply put, understanding that we use the term "tree" to pick out the thing in my front yard suffices
— creativesoul
Naming things with words is more than just sticking a symbol in front of a sign. Words are not just tools that we use to refer to an independently existing universe... — Joshs
...they are ways that the world we interact with modifies our engagement with it.
Using a word changes us at the same time that it changes something in our environment.
Words only exist in their use , and their use reveals new aspects of things.