We're working from different notions of what counts as a basic or rudimentary belief. Our exchange led us into the notion of whether or not a language less creature's belief could possible count as being well grounded. If it requires being based upon other beliefs, then we arrive at the notion of infinite regress... Somewhere along the line, some belief or other is not based upon prior belief.
Can those be identified and/or isolated, and can they count as being well grounded true ones?
— creativesoul
I think so, at least in principle. — Andrew M
But... when we're offering an account of Bob's belief, they must be Bob's beliefs... right?
— creativesoul
We're asking whether Bob's belief that it is 3pm counts as knowledge (and why or why not). It doesn't really matter if Bob simply believes that space aliens implanted his mind with the correct time. We only care that Bob believed the time that the clock showed and that the clock was working correctly. — Andrew M
Bob looks at the clock and forms the belief that it is 3pm. That's a basic or rudimentary belief with no implication that he needed another belief prior to forming that belief, which would just result in an infinite regress. — Andrew M
However we can nonetheless investigate the premises of Bob's belief. Those premises emerge as part of our analysis, not something we need to suppose were Bob's beliefs at that time.
pretty much that whole quote is full of lofty, impractical requirements for whats “proper”. — DingoJones
Right. Heidegger, indeed. But (and I hope you'll agree) not on his authority but rather on his successful unconcealment of the phenomenon. Since I've been exposed to Heidegger, I find myself discovering his insights in less explicit form in Hegel and Feuerbach. How does language exist? The basic insight seems to be that we are social on a deeper level than we are individual. So analyses that start from an isolated subject gazing at pure meanings, while possibly illuminating, are also trapped within a tradition obsessed with an epistemological problem while neglecting an ontological one.
What say you? — softwhere
I mean, someone already point it out, but doesn't the fact that you're attributing to him a self-contradictory belief give you pause? — fiveredapples
The content of his belief included a particular broken clock. He believed that that particular broken clock was working, and hence used it to form the subsequent belief that it was 3PM.
— creativesoul
No, the content of his belief didn't include a broken clock. The content of his belief is capture by what he thought... — fiveredapples
For the sake of getting clear on this point, I'll just pretend he actually had this thought, but I don't concede that he actually thought this: "This clock is working." How you can you object to this analysis? He looked at the clock and thought, "This clock is working." The clock's not working is a fact about the clock. You can't include this fact as part of his belief, because he never thought that the clock wasn't working. So, you can't say that his thought was "This broken clock is working." — fiveredapples
Are you claiming to have achieved this standard with your own philosophy then?
Your philosophy is all this:
“One that is rendered in evolutionarily amenable terms. One built upon universal criterion. One built upon knowledge of all thought and belief.
One without exception. One that is capable of taking account of that which exists in it's entirety prior to our awareness. One that is capable of taking account of that which is prior to our language. One that is capable of setting out a coherent account of all thought and belief.” — DingoJones
When I said "to know our minds" I meant no margin of error — god must be atheist
He believes that it's 3 PM. And he came to believe that it's 3 PM by looking at a particular clock, a particular broken clock. — fiveredapples
3. If we want to know how the mind works, we have to make a mental image of the mind. But to make a mental image of the mind, we need a storage capacity that equals the mental image, and then some more storage capacity to manipulate the thoughts that explain the mind. Therefore to explain the mind, we need a larger, better, more intelligent thing than our mind. Which is not achievable because you can't have something bigger than itself. — god must be atheist
You didnt answer the question sir. What are some things that you have this kind of account for? — DingoJones
Trusting clocks is not always automatic, to be as clear as possible.
— creativesoul
I agree. It's an intermediate phenomenon. But trusting language (as you did when you wrote the sentence above) is usually at least as automatic as trusting a clock usually is.
Being-in-a-world and being-with-others is (in an important sense) prior to the subject that examines her mind and questions her beliefs. We live in a world with others of spoons, stairs, books, and clocks. They don't exist primarily as objects for ratiocination but as 'transparent' tools-in-use through which we see our thousand worldly purposes. Language, I'm claiming, has this tool-in-use kind or mode of being.
Along these lines, our 'blind' know-how concerning words like 'know' is prior to our retrospective attempt to define 'knowledge' so that the definition fits our intuition. — softwhere
That seems like an incredibly high standard of whats “proper”. What are some things you have this kind of account of? — DingoJones
Neither of which properly accounts for his belief that a broken clock is working.
— creativesoul
First of all, he doesn't believe that a broken clock is working. He believes falsely that the clock is working. Those two statements are different. But nevermind the difference. Why think he has a belief? — fiveredapples
Of course, we should be clear about the difference between (A) "He doesn't have a belief about the clock's working or not" and (B) "He believes the clock is not working." Sometimes (B) is stated as "He doesn't believe the clock is working," which sounds like (A) -- but it's not. — fiveredapples
...what philosophical work is the belief you're attributing to him doing to explain the epistemic failure? — fiveredapples
What I don't understand about your position is that after you say that the broken clock can't lend epistemic justification, why the need to say more? I mean, doesn't that fully explain the justification failure? — fiveredapples
Why are you using math if you reject its rules?
Its like you are fishing, and your friend catches a fish and says “i caught the biggest fish, 3 feet!”
And you say “no mines bigger”, but your friend protests after seeing your fish “its only 2 feet!” To which you reply “I dont use feet when measuring my fish, its way bigger”
Thats what you are doing here, propping up your argument using math but not using math when it shows your basis to be incorrect.
Is there another way of framing things not using math? If not, might be time to reevaluate. — DingoJones
Ok, and what is meant by “properly”? — DingoJones
What I don't understand about your position is that after you say that the broken clock can't lend epistemic justification, why the need to say more? — fiveredapples
Can you elaborate on what you think this broad consensus is? — DingoJones
So, I find that claiming the person could be skeptical and not believe that the clock is reliable to be quite a stretch, and an unnecessary one at that.
I'm not sure I follow this. Who claimed that the man is skeptical that the clock is reliable and that he does not believe it is reliable? And isn't this consistent? — fiveredapples
Yes, where well-grounded means that the belief as well as all the premises that the belief depends on are true...
— Andrew M
Hmmm....
Would that exclude language less creatures' belief from being well grounded? That would be at odds with my current leanings. — creativesoul
I don't think so. You, as a language user, could in principle identify the premises of any belief and check if they're true (and thus whether the belief holder could be said to have knowledge). But those premises are true (or not) independently of whether anyone does identify them. — Andrew M
Our considerations are about whether or not looking at a broken clock is a justified means to know what time it is.
That's not what I've been considering. — fiveredapples
I have flatly rejected the view that a broken clock can lend epistemic justification for knowledge. — fiveredapples
There are times when we are thinking about thought and belief. In such situations, we can say something like... "for the sake of argument, let's assume X", where that means we are going to assume that X is true(grant the truth of X), solely as a means to follow the consequences.
— creativesoul
That's not the only type of assumption — fiveredapples