You're creating a definition in such as way as you already know everything that's in it. That's fine, but philosophically useless. — Pseudonym
Language comprehension. The crow's behaviour provides criterial evidence of understanding (a mental faculty), not of verbal modelling.So what is involved in understanding a proposition? — Banno
All about dissipative structures, triadic relations, heat death, habit, blah, blah.No doubt Apo will be along soon to tell us... — Banno
I can see advantages in making the definition explicit.
The aim of this thread, for me, is not so much to set out a true and faithful definition - there's no such thing - but to explore the pros and cons, work out what might be consistent and what doesn't work. — Banno
A belief is a propositional attitude.
That is, it can be placed in a general form as a relation between someone and a proposition. So "John believes that the sky is blue" can be rendered as
Believes(John, "The sky is blue")
B(a,p)
Language comprehension. The crow's behaviour provides criterial evidence of understanding (a mental faculty), not of verbal modelling. — Galuchat
That is, definitions are created post hoc; that is certainly the case here.
And my intuition, which I think I share with at least a few others around here, is that thermostats do not have beliefs. — Banno
attitude which accepts a proposition as true with insufficient evidence (i.e., having mind-to-world fit). — Galuchat
False beliefs contribute to bias, illusion, and error. — Galuchat
belief is a mental function — Galuchat
Regardless, philosophy can be characterised in some way by looking at connections between beliefs, philosophers, and philosophical language, and to act philosophically (in terms of debate/essay) is to exhibit those connections through language use - — fdrake
I think is safe to assert that you believe yourself to be writing English..
Is it so hard to find beliefs amongst words? Perhaps not.
Louis Lane believe superman can fly but does not believe that Clarke Kent can fly, despite clark and Superman being the very same individual. — Banno
To reduce belief to 'X believes that P' and logical relations between beliefs and contained propositions will tell you what to do with, at most, already formed beliefs from engaging with (a narrowly circumscribed set of) phenomena. This is a tiny part of an account of belief. — fdrake
One will not find a belief by dissecting a brain. Beliefs are found in behaviour, including spoken behaviour. — Banno
I can find you a thermostat which clearly 'beleives' it's cold — Pseudonym
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