The problem for some is that this one in particular injured political symbols and tribal pride rather than the homes and businesses of ordinary citizens — NOS4A2
I’ll just say I wouldn’t put it past them. — NOS4A2
our everyday language is insufficient. — Sam26
...we never perceive the world at all, but just images of the objects we understand to constitute it... — Janus
The whole world? What does it look like? — Janus
I insist that what you call prelinguistic truths or beliefs can be put into propositional form. But I'm tiered of that argument, and hope we might leave it as moot. — Banno
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. — creativesoul
How do I know the world is not my experience? — Janus
...we never perceive the world... — Janus
The world is a static idea of the totality of facts, things and relations. — Janus
Suppose we have a true sentence of the form
S is true IFF p
where S is some sentence and p gives the meaning of S.
What sort of thing is S? well, it's going to be a true proposition (here, continuing the convention adopted from the SEP article on truth of using "proposition" as a carry-all for sentence, statements, utterance, truth-bearer, or whatever one prefers).
And what sort of thing is p? Since the T-sentence is true, it is a state of affairs, a fact. — Banno
we know that all our identifications and definitions are static abstractions derived from, filtered from so to speak, our actual experience which is an evershifting succession of images and impressions. Our experience is the territory and the model we have evolved of the world of facts and things is our map, and as the old saw goes 'the map is not the territory'.
The map is tied to the territory by long consideration, historically speaking, of human experience, and conjecture about it, and its meaning, and so forth. But we cannot discursively set the map and territory side by side so to speak to examine the connections, whether purported to be rational or in some sense merely physical, between them.
But we don't need to do that anyway, — Janus
Analysis and conceptualization cannot gain purchase on that actuality... — Janus
There is, as a kind of ground to all our propositions, truths and facts, a pre-linguistic actuality to which they must submit. Analysis and conceptualization cannot gain purchase on that actuality, because to do so is to bring it into the linguistic domain, and there all we have purchase on is our communal perceptions and conceptions of what is the case, — Janus
Too many replies, and I'm off to the hardware store. Good to see a consensus developing, even if it is "Banno is wrong..."
Now, if you folk could just agree as to where I am wrong... — Banno
With any theory of truth, you look for certain criteria to determine truth or falsehood. For instance, with correspondence theory, you look for correspondence between an idea and reality. Specifically, you need to determine if it's true that correspondence exists. — Tate
This is a very tricky thing to talk about. — Janus
"What is the case" is meaningless beyond what is communally perceived and conceived to be the case. — Janus
↪creativesoul continues the rejection of truth in favour of belief. Something to do with a correspondence between a mouse going behind a tree and biological machinery. I had difficulty following the discussion. — Banno
Based on what? — Benkei
That your example was meant to convey something about someone without language using correspondence, so I thought it important to say that language is part of your example.
But I missed the last sentence. OK, this is a contrast case, not an example. My bad. I was reading it as the example.
Sure, I agree that with a language less creature that they do not speak about truth or falsity or anything like that. Say a wild bird -- they communicate, but it's not with language. Or, perhaps we could say, it's a proto-language, prior to having the ability to represent its own sentences. — Moliere
Perhaps a better tact, though: if truth is more general than linguistic -- say it is a correspondence between some animal belief and facts or reality, construing belief broadly to indicate that it could be linguistic or not so as to make explicit that we're interested in this -- then we are the types of creatures that rely upon linguistic truth, and only by understanding this kind of truth would we even be able to make statements more general about this bigger-picture truth. — Moliere
Sheet-as-sheet to me indicates naming and descriptive practices accompanying the seeing. This eliminates language less seeing of the sheet, which - of course - is a problem.
— creativesoul
Is it? — Moliere
Perhaps a better tact, though: if truth is more general than linguistic -- say it is a correspondence between some animal belief and facts or reality, construing belief broadly to indicate that it could be linguistic or not so as to make explicit that we're interested in this -- then we are the types of creatures that rely upon linguistic truth, and only by understanding this kind of truth would we even be able to make statements more general about this bigger-picture truth. — Moliere
What's the difference between seeing the sheet and seeing the sheet-as-sheet?
— creativesoul
I was going to say no difference — Moliere
Well, hold on a second there. Suppose the case of seeing the sheet-as-sheet. — Moliere
What is it for snow to be a constituent of the fact that snow is white? Facts have parts? — Banno
Also feel like noting that all of us have already undergone that transition, having started without language but then, through exposure to the language-using social world, we learned it through our social practices. (and hasn't anyone noticed how dogs, and our fellow apes, learn bits of language with training? That is, if the Lion spoke to me, I'd know what the Lion said -- at least as I think of things) — Moliere
I think I'd say the above is not a belief, but a belief-mediated perception. We see the sheet-as-sheep. We might hold beliefs about sheet-as-sheep -- but note how this strays from logic, and is clearly phenomenology, — Moliere
I'd say perception is linguistically mediated in us, but that perception simpliciter, in all species, does not require language. When we talk of beliefs in animals we're speaking in folk psychology. We understand the animals, being animals ourselves, and we're speaking of their psychological states... — Moliere
This seems to have the odd result that the sentence "it is raining or it is not raining" is true because it corresponds to anywhere. — Banno
I would word it slightly different, the concept tree, includes the notion of something existentially separate from language. Whereas the notion of true and false seems dependent on linguistic content in an important sense. In other words, I can imagine a dog seeing a tree apart from language, but not a dog observing true and false apart from the application of these concepts within our linguistic framework. This can be a bit confusing, because when we talk about true and false, we often refer to objects (i.e., facts) that we observe, although not always (referring to facts as abstract objects).
There is definitely much more to say, and I'm sure we're not going to see eye to eye on some of this.
Sorry I didn't respond to all of your posts. I have a difficult time sitting for hours responding. So, I tend to take long breaks (sometime hours, days, weeks at a time). I find that social media can be a bit taxing, and in some ways unhealthy. — Sam26
So what is reality — val p miranda