If the limits of language are the limits of our world, then language also limits our beliefs? — frank
what is the believer? — frank
In assessing the nature of belief we're attempting to pull ourselves free of our time and place to occupy a vantage point on who and what we are. — frank
A belief may be pre-linguistic in your sense, or in W's appeal to forms of life, but also linguistic in the sense that it can be stated (later). — jamalrob
And I'm not talking about instincts. — Sam26
That's the question: is it legitimate to cal something a belief if it is caused - if there is no choice involved? — Banno
I prefer to say that belief and knowledge are compatible with doubt, though it seems a psychological "state" or "feeling" of certainty is not compatible with a psychological "state" or "feeling" of doubt.A corollary of this is that belief does not stand in opposition to falsehood, but to doubt. Truth goes with falsehood, belief with doubt. And at the extreme end of belief we find certainty. In certainty, doubt is inadmissible. — Banno
I agree that the explanation is satisfying in a wide range of cases, but strictly speaking I wouldn't call it sufficient.So, that John is hungry, and that John believes eating a sandwich will remove his hunger, we have a sufficient causal explanation for why John ate the sandwich. — Banno
Some but not all beliefs seem well-suited to this form. Though many more beliefs have practical implications. In ordinary circumstances and all else equal, if S believes p then S is disposed to actions (a1, a2, ..., an).And here we have an indication of the propositional content of a belief; of the content of the 'p' in B(a,p). The content here has the form "doing X will produce result Y". — Banno
Of course there is a wide variety of ways to "believe in God", and I expect there's no single set of actions correlated in the relevant way with all such beliefs.Which raises the question of whether all beliefs can be parsed in the form of an action production a result; does "I believe in God" parse to "I believe that praying for rain will produce rain", or some conjunction of such beliefs? — Banno
Seeing the pens, papers and so on justifies the belief.
In much the same way as "Here is a hand" justifies belief in hands. — Banno
I'm sympathetic with the overall view you've sketched. — Cabbage Farmer
Belief does not entail certainty. Knowledge does not entail certainty. — Cabbage Farmer
I doubt we could ever give a description of an agent's states along these lines... that would be sufficient to predict the agent's subsequent action in all cases. — Cabbage Farmer
Nevertheless, some ways of believing in God will dispose the believer to perform or affirm a conjunction of actions or beliefs-about-action of the sort you've indicated. — Cabbage Farmer
Belief does not entail certainty. Knowledge does not entail certainty. — Cabbage Farmer
For me, having a belief about believing is motived directly from social interaction, — Dawnstorm
When I enter the room and see the pens and papers I know there are pens and papers. — Janus
Or is Janus certain, but since lacking in justification, not knowledgeable? — Banno
it's a basic belief that is part of the background information, — Sam26
To call it a belief suggests that it could somehow be wrong — Janus
I would say that Janus simply knows, and certainty does not come into it: but that once doubt enters, he can no longer be certain that he knows, or that he is even justified in believing. It's all context dependent in other words. — Janus
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