No, that's what I've been trying to tell you. — Janus
I'm not talking about us considering from within a linguistic context, something we can hardly avoid doing, but about considering agents and mental correlations as being outside a linguistic context. The latter I don't believe can coherently be done because we can't say what a non-linguistic agent or mental correlation could be. — Janus
This thread is not specifically a discussion of Wittgenstein. All I have asked is why you think the term 'belief' is more useful in the context of this discussion than 'expectation', and why you believe that using the same term in both linguistic and non-linguistic contexts does not do more to obscure the differences between animal and human, and between human propositional and non-propositional dispositions to action, by making it more difficult to see the very distinctions that might lead to greater understanding and clarity. — Janus
"Semantic field" is a term used in structural linguistics and anthropology, and it's simply the range of meaning associated with a word or a set of closely related words. It's not the most precise concept out there, and it's theoretical in the sense that you cannot meet a pure semantic field "in the wild", because it's always already organised (say into a word, a set of words, a taxonomy...). It's a useful concept, I think, when comparing things like languages. I found it personally useful when figuring out the technical terminology of linguistics and sociology, since the same "sign body" (say "adverb", or "social role") doesn't always cover the same things (i.e. it depends on who uses the term).
You say a definition can be wrong, but before you can determine whether or not a defintion is wrong, you'd need to know what it is you're talking about, and that's sort of the problem in a thread titled "What is belief?" What I also meant to say, but what I probably buried a bit too much in excess verbiage, is that I think "A belief is an attitude towards a proposition," is an operational definition - not a theoretic one. It drives at methodology rather than meaning. Normally, such a line is connected to a theory that sheds light on all the short cuts in the operational defition. For example, the question of whether a belief needs to be linguistic or if it can be pre-linguistic would have been addressed in the theory. When I first replied to the thread, I probably took it to be a shortcut something like "A belief is an attitude towards something that's expressable as a proposition," but I didn't properly think this through until you brought it up (even though other people have been talking about pre-linguistic beliefs and I nodded in appreciation when I read ↪jamalrob's post, here).
It's a bit premature to say a definition is "wrong", when we can't even be sure yet, whether we're talking about the same thing. Some people might indeed only use "belief" for propositional attitudes in its most literal sense, and whether that's sound or not depends on what other words they use and when and how. It's not like we can encounter unmediated beliefs and ask what they are: we encounter things that imply belief - behaviour, linguistic and otherwise. Or artefacts that represent language (like a forum post). — Dawnstorm
OK, in my view an agent is someone who acts deliberatively by considering counterfactually the various courses of action available. Mental correlations are associations of concepts. You say believing is a mental correlation between the believer and "'objects' of physiological sensory perception".
Now, leaving aside the fact that believing can be of non-sensory 'objects', we have no way of saying what a non-conceptual mental correlation or belief could be, and since concepts would seem to be possible only in the context of language, we have no idea how to apply the concepts 'belief' or 'mental correlation' in the case of animals or pre-linguistic humans. If you think you do have a coherent account of how such concepts could be applied, then please have at it. — Janus
after all atoms are nearly all empty space — Wayfarer
According to Canada's National Laboratory for Particle Physics, if a golf ball represents the nucleus, the first group of electrons would be a kilometer away. The second group would be 4 kilometers away, and so on.
... if an apple were enlarged to the size of the Earth, its individual atoms would be the size of regular apples. Another way to illustrate the sizes of an atom's parts is to imagine that the nucleus of an atom was the size of our sun. In that case, the closest electron would be beyond Mars.
The individual thinks the proposition is true.
This is, if you like, the significance of a belief statement. It follows from Moore's paradox, in which someone is assume to believe something that the hold not to be true. For example:
"I believe the world is flat, but the world is not flat".
While this is difficult to set out as a clear contradiction, there is something deeply unhappy about it. The conclusion is that one thinks that what one believes is indeed true. — Banno
But we keep repeating this discussion. It seems that you will not move away from the notion of a belief as a thing in a mind. But for me that view makes no sense. What counts is not a thing in Jack's minds, but what he does: meowing and staring at the bowl and following me around and so on, which all stops when I fill the bowl. These actions are not mental tables and chairs; they are Jack's interactions with the world. — Banno
the explanations are post hock and sufficient — Banno
The perforative paradox comes about only when expressed in the first person. — Banno
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