Something like Pascal’s Wager (although not quite the same). — Wayfarer
Depending on whether it's a good bet, or not. — Wayfarer
Well, you see, I think this is ultimately a nihilistic attitude, regrettably, and that it comes from limiting the understanding to only what is physical or natural. — Wayfarer
In terms of purpose, the only biological purpose is survival and reproduction, but the end point - the ‘final cause’, so to speak - is the recovery of thermodynamic equilibrium, which is to all intents non-existence, is it not? — Wayfarer
Here's a basis for an epistemology: Some statements are true. And there are some statements which it is unreasonable to doubt. — Banno
Come on, a cursory glance over my argument will show that's not the case, you're just being disingenuous for effect. — Pseudonym
Im arguing that the only use to which I've ever seen that kind of theory put is to denigrate animals in such a way as to justify their mistreatment. That is the reason why I'm opposed to it. — Pseudonym
Im arguing that the only use to which I've ever seen that kind of theory put is to denigrate animals in such a way as to justify their mistreatment. That is the reason why I'm opposed to it. — Pseudonym
I don't think we're going to make any progress here. We agree that human language is worlds away from other animals, you think that distance is so significant as to affect our thought process and requires a whole new language to describe its effects, I don't. — Pseudonym
But consciousness, if defined as the modeling relation itself is foundational and so could also be considered to be, in that sense, substantial. — Janus
But consciousness, if defined as the modeling relation itself is foundational and so could also be considered to be, in that sense, substantial. — Janus
I'm not saying Peirce argues for that (although it might be what he is alluding to with his notion of matter as "effete mind"). — Janus
If we count the modeling relation itself as being consciousness, then it would be in a restricted sense ( as individual consciousness) that the interpretant would be considered to represent consciousness. Taken that way then it would not be right to say the interpretant is fundamental. On the other hand if we think there is a God...then the sign relation would be like the holy trinity, where the interpretant is the father, the object is the son, and the sign is the holy spirit. — Janus
I'm not sure we are really disagreeing so much as it being a matter of emphasis. — Janus
Consciousness is fundamental to all knowing. — Janus
Or in Peircean terms, it is the interpretant that is the most fundamental element of the sign relation. — Janus
I would say the "I-ness" is the fundamental fact upon which all other knowledge turns. It cannot be explained because it is the ground of all explanation. — Janus
Of course our modeling of the world is inevitably dualistic in the sense that there are those two poles of explained and explainer, but there is a third element; the relation between the two poles: the explanation. So the unity of reality is really a trinity. — Janus
I am just as absolutely certain that I am a linguistic being whose cognition is mediated by that fact, as I am that I see a blue sky. — Janus
For example I am absolutely certain that I see a blue sky; belief simply doesn't enter into it. — Janus
if you studied the matter, you must at least be familiar with predator calls, which are entirely symbolic, — Pseudonym
I agree, doubt is inherent within belief because we know that we are never beyond the possibility of mistake. But I think that what separates belief from similar mental content which is not belief, is the conviction that there is a low possibility of mistake. This conviction is tied up with temporal extension such that a longer period of time without mistake reinforces the conviction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Peirce, as a pantheist, thought God and the cosmos constituted one substance. To introduce his views we will trace the philosophic theme that runs through all four stages of his thought: the cosmos is an infinite semiotic goal-directed evolutionary process that converges on the good and the real....
...Peirce's evolutionary pragmatic idealism was a radically new form of pantheism. He replaced the theist's idea of a "one-shot" creation of the world by the gradual creation of the world through the evolutionary process of Tychism-Synechism-Agapism. He thought of cosmic evolution as a divine learning process. Chance, continuity, and cosmic purposes are all aspects of God, and we humans are parts of this infinite evolutionary divine system. ...
...When asked "Do you believe this Supreme Being to have been the creator of the universe?" he answered "Not so much to have been as to be now creating the universe",...
...Peirce's evolutionary pragmatic idealism is an evolutionary form of pantheism that operates in the opposite direction from emanationism and Spinozism. Whereas the latter theologies proceed from the highest level (God) on down through successively lower levels, Peirce's cosmic evolutionism begins at the simplest level of a random chaos of feelings and gradually improves under the guidance of final causality toward an infinite limit of perfection. Thus Peirce's pantheism is emanationism "turned upside down"...
Presumably she will not think 'they may or may not be there' but she will become just a tad more wary. — Janus
And anticipation seems to have doubt inherent within it, so it doesn't seem to be consistent with belief either. — Metaphysician Undercover
it would be better not to say that animals and pre-linguistic humans believe but that they associate and expect. — Janus
I am really just arguing for the usefulness of distinctions between different kinds of believing in pre-linguistic and linguistic contexts. — Janus
if you happen to have a public link, kindly share. — Dzung
I can't help thinking that the mother of Christianity, Buddhism, is superior to our own religion. (NEM III/2 p. 872)
... tychism must give birth to an evolutionary cosmology in which all the regularities of nature and of mind are regarded as products of growth, and to a Schelling-fashioned idealism which holds matter to be mere specialized and partially deadened mind. I may mention, for the benefit of those who are curious in studying mental biographies, that I was born and reared in the neighborhood of Concord - I mean in Cambridge - at the time when Emerson, Hedge, and their friends were disseminating the ideas that they had caught from Schelling, and Schelling from Plotinus, from Boehm, or from God knows what minds stricken with the monstrous mysticism of the East. [6.102]
Being aware of no symmetry from Peirce, I think if we still need to linger on it, we may want to analyze Synechism, not only Tychism. — Dzung
It is symbolic language which enables abstraction — Janus
Are you suggesting that animals might imagine alternative scenarios? — Janus
"It is important to remember that the constraint on belief imposed by experience is a negative one. The world affects our beliefs not by our finding out positive things about it, but rather, by providing recalcitrant or surprising things which upset an expectation produced by a belief. The role which the world plays is not one of providing something for our beliefs to correspond to, but rather, one of letting us know when we have a belief that conflicts with it."
Propositional' I would say means formulated as 'I believe that'; this way a belief is given a definite form. — Janus
the point at issue seems to be whether such believings are propositional — Janus
I would like to start with an inquiry on the above statement: specifically is it Peircean or not? I haven't found anywhere Peirce expressed atheism or the like. Or maybe I didn't follow you correctly. — Dzung
