"The bowl is empty" is not meaningful to Jack, it's meaningful to us.
— creativesoul
Tell that to Jack. — Banno
You avoid talking about mind like the plague...
— creativesoul
Rubbish. This whole thread is about mind. — Banno
"No, Banno - there is in addition an irreducible, invisible thing-in-the-mind had by those who understand 'heavy' - the concept of heavy."
And when you and I both understand "heavy", we have the same concept in our minds? Is there one concept, shared, or is there one concept each?
And if there is one concept that we all share, what sort of thing could it be?
But if we have one concept each, how can it be the same concept? How is "heavy" for me the same as "heavy" for you? — Banno
Do you agree that we need to determine as precisely as possible what non-linguistic belief contains and/or consists of; the content? — Sam26
For my purposes I don't see the need. — Sam26
How then can you claim to know what you're saying about it? — creativesoul
And that means that what we thought was in our heads, isn't. — Banno
This seemed to go unaddressed, so I will continue my line of thought.
If we follow Wittgenstein's injunction to look to the use rather than the meaning, the dilemma I set up here dissipates.
You and I both use the word "heavy"; The concept, so far as there is one, is not one thing in your head and another thing in my head, but our shared use of the word.
Conceiving of a concept as an item in one;s mind, or a pattern in the firing of one's neurones, or in any other way that makes it a thing inside the head, is ill-conceived.
If concepts are to be anything, they must be shared.
And that means that what we thought was in our heads, isn't. — Banno
I don't think you're denying that nothing is going on in the head, only that when it comes to language, it's not dependent on what's going in the head. Is that correct? — Sam26
Not every word has an objective referent, but every meaningful word has a subjective referent, namely its subjective meaning. — Hanover
What's that, then?
A belief that cannot be placed in the canonical form B(a,p)?
Or just an unstated belief? — Banno
I already did: beliefs of what is aesthetic to individual works of art and belief of what God is. Art can inspire revolutions due to its conveyed aesthetics — javra
The meaning of a word - so far as there can be such a thing - cannot be its "subjective referent" - whatever that might be - because you and I can mean the very same thing with the same word; that would imply that the subjective referent in your head was the very same subjective referent as in my head, thus contradicting the very idea of it being subjective. — Banno
You know any being's belief by its behavior whether it's by their gestures, movements, or utterances. Language is behavior just like your cat looking for its bowl. All external behavior offers an incomplete report of the internal belief, which could result in alternative explanations, just like you remain uncertain of Banno's beliefs in this thread despite his explicit linguistic behavior attempting to explain himself.One problem I see, and I'm sure I'm not alone, is how we can know what the non-linguistic creature's belief is. I mean, one could come up with a variety of different explanations for the same set of behaviours — creativesoul
That doesn't work. One might be inspired by art to believe this or that; the this or that is expressible, — Banno
What is a motive? A desire, or a belief in a way to bring about that desire? Or both? — Banno
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