With Banno I agree that no language, no concept. — creativesoul
Think of a concept as a container. The container is akin to a name/identity. The conceptual understanding is everything falling under that name/identity. As before, our concepts point towards something, so they're abstract understanding. I would argue against any notion of anything close to that when/where there has been and/or is no language. — creativesoul
Earlier Sam mentioned confusion between our linguistic representation (reports) and what we're reporting upon. — creativesoul
However, we cannot claim that our reports are equivalent to the belief itself. That is my issue with claiming that belief is a relation between a proposition/statement and the believer. The only relation that non-linguistic beasties have with that is one we make. — creativesoul
They know nothing of right angles. — creativesoul
I conceptualize nonlinguistically and find myself searching for words to express those concepts. — Hanover
I'm increasingly convinced that beliefs are a folk-psychological back-construct; that they are an invention that serves, however poorly, our attempts to explain what we do; but which does not correspond to anything real. — Banno
"No, Banno - there is in addition an irreducible, invisible thing-in-the-mind had by those who understand 'heavy' - the concept of heavy." — Banno
Yes, because there is nothing more to understanding the concept than using a proper lift on heavy objects, keeping your back straight; asking for help when things are too heavy. And using the word properly. — Banno
And if there is one concept that we all share, what sort of thing could it be? — Banno
With Banno I agree that no language, no concept.
— creativesoul
Cuckoo. :eyes:
That's like saying "no juicer, no fruit". A juicer is a tool that is used to express fruit juice, just as language is a tool that is used to express concepts. — Sapientia
creative
Think of a concept as a container. The container is akin to a name/identity. The conceptual understanding is everything falling under that name/identity. As before, our concepts point towards something, so they're abstract understanding. I would argue against any notion of anything close to that when/where there has been and/or is no language.
Sapientia
You're making no sense. A concept can't be both a name and an abstract understanding, and the one is not like the other in notable respects. Make your mind up.
Sapentia
The proper distinction is between a concept and its expression in language. You appear to be confusing the two.
Sapentia
Concepts precede language. Therefore it's not true that there has never been the one without the other.
Concepts are linguistic. — creativesoul
I also agree that what's leads us astray is that we are using language to talk about the beliefs on non-linguistic animals, including pre-linguistic man. However, I'm not sure what you mean by "...having a belief that is not meaningful to the creature," i.e., maybe you mean in terms of language, it's not meaningful to the creature? — Sam26
You seem to be saying what I was saying a while back, i.e., that people seem to be confusing beliefs, the linguistic expression of beliefs, with an act that shows the belief apart from language. There is no way for these creatures to understand the belief as we understand the belief, since the belief as we are expressing them are necessarily linguistic. They have no concept called belief. So part of the problem is that our talk of these beliefs is a necessary function of language, which in turn leads to the assumption that the belief itself, as shown in the animal/human, is a necessary function of language. It is a necessary function of language if we are to express beliefs using language, but that doesn't mean that an act cannot show a belief apart from a linguistic understanding.
Another way to think of this, is when we talk about the Earth having one moon, we can only do this in language, i.e., the concept has an instance in reality. So the concept has a referent (i.e., the object Earth) quite apart from the concept and the linguistic use. In the same way, there is a referent to the word belief, viz., particular actions that an animal expresses in life. We see these same actions (a kind of referent) in us, i.e., in our daily actions. I open the door, shows the belief that a door is there, regardless of any expression of the belief in language. So the action is the referent, granted, it is different from the referent Earth, but it's still part of reality as something that is instantiated. Thus, these acts are referred to in language by the concept belief/s. Just as we use the concept Earth to refer to the object. Maybe this helps, not sure.
I'm telling you that I comprehend concepts nonlinguistically, so it's sort of silly for you to tell me I'm not, don't you think? — Hanover
My position doesn't require mentalese... — creativesoul
I don't think that I would agree with this bit. Referents are about one 'kind' of meaning. While all thought and belief must be meaningful to the believer(otherwise how does it possibly count as such), I'm not too keen upon referents being prior to language. — creativesoul
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