You asked:
Isn't belief existentially contingent on judgement?
I mean, in order to believe something, don't you have to do some sort of deliberate assessment as to whether or not it is true?
Without that judgement, how can it be a belief, which means to accept something, and acceptance implies deliberate judgement?
So don't you think that we need a separation between thought and belief...
During language acquisition, one has no ability to perform such an assessment, and yet s/he is acquiring thought/belief via purely adoptive means. — creativesoul
The fact that one must think/believe that something is there prior to thinking/believing that that something is called "a tree", shows that not all belief is believing that something is true. — creativesoul
If learning the rules of language requires only using language correctly, then there is no issue with Chomsky's claim that children learn the rules with seemingly little effort. I'm not so sure that correct use equals learning the rules. As a matter of fact, that equivalency is highly suspect, on my view.
Are you denying that one must think/believe that something is there prior to thinking/believing that that something is called "a tree"? — creativesoul
You wrote:
I keep thinking about how an Osprey can spot a fish from a great distance dive at a fantastic rate of speed and automatically (they are successful 1 in 4 dives avg!) compensating for the differences in refractive indexes. They must possess biologic structures than don't require thought/belief that are built in, that enable such feats of perception.
While we are not Osprey's, I think we also possess certain biologic structures that enable us to perceive automatically...
...and that the quality of the information is already structured prior to our awareness of it. Language is structured, the child mimics and manipulates that sound design features it hears, producing results it considers significant when it gets the attention of others.
Seeing something doesn't require identifying it as "something". — creativesoul
The fact that one must think/believe that something is there prior to thinking/believing that that something is called "a tree", shows that not all belief is believing that something is true. — creativesoul
It requires drawing mental correlation(s) between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception and/or the agent's own mental state. — creativesoul
The world isn't existentially contingent upon the term "world".... — creativesoul
You wrote:
But the world is existentially contingent on the word("world"), and that's what you don't seem to be grasping. "World" implies a particular way of apprehending, understanding one's environment, which developed from the use of the word "world".
First of all, the term "world" does not imply a particular way of apprehending, understanding one's environment. To quite the contrary, it implies many, many different ways. The world is not many many different ways; worldviews are. Thus, worldviews can be wrong. Worldviews are expressed in language(our talk). They consist of thought/belief about the world(what we're talking about). — creativesoul
That shows your conflation between our talk and what we're talking about. — creativesoul
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