I don't have a full-blown theory to offer, but I think this is the right stuff to look at.
When you walk down the sidewalk in a big city, you're behaving as if the buildings you walk by won't fall on you, as if the cars you walk by won't explode, and so on. We could you say you behave as if you hold such beliefs. Do you? If asked, you might assent. Would we say such beliefs cause you to walk down the sidewalk, or even that they are reasons for doing so? Doesn't sound quite right. And yet attributing such beliefs to you makes sense. And if you did not hold beliefs such as these, would you behave the way you do? — Srap Tasmaner
The chickens in the yard believe that they're about to get fed when hearing the sound of the food container lid being opened. They do not believe that "they're about to get fed" is true. — creativesoul
There is a certain rooster which I throw rocks towards. I do not aim to hit him, and haven't yet. I intend to keep him from bullying another younger rooster whom I'm more fond of. That younger one eats out of my hand. The older rooster remembers having rocks thrown at him. In fact, most times anymore, I need not even actually throw one. The movement itself is enough. — creativesoul
One who doesn't know(believe) that cars can explode cannot believe that they won't. — creativesoul
One who doesn't know that buildings can fall down, cannot believe that they won't. — creativesoul
What's wrong with behaviourism? There's certainly something about it that strikes me as correct, even if I don't believe that it's entirely correct. — Sapientia
How do we further discriminate between our reports of Jack's belief? — creativesoul
What is the notion of "object of belief" doing here aside from unnecessarily overcomplicating the discourse?
— creativesoul
The word "slap" is a verb that has to have an object. If I say, "John slapped.", it's just assumed that he slapped something or somebody.
Belief is just such a verb. It just has to have an object. If we abandon this scenario, I think it would be necessary to stop using the word belief and make up a new word. Sneag. Let's discuss sneag.
— frank
Belief is not a verb. Belief is a noun.
— creativesoul
If John had belief, he believed something.
— frank
If John had fleas, he flead something.
If John had bad hair, he bad haired something.
If John had apple pie, he apple pied something.
If John had smarts, he smarted something.
— creativesoul
Sorry creative, but frank won that debate. You're trivially correct that "belief" is a noun, not a verb. But frank is correct that if John had belief, then he believed something - your mimicry does nothing to change that - and he's right that a discussion about the object of belief is of relevance to a general discussion about belief, which is what this seems to be, or to have become. If you don't want to talk about that here, you don't have to. — Sapientia
True, but pedantic. I gave it a more charitable reading. I doubt he meant to exclude belief-that. — Sapientia
One who doesn't know(believe) that cars can explode cannot believe that they won't.
— creativesoul
Yes they can. What makes you think that? It just wouldn't be reasonable, at least if you mean the belief that they won't under any circumstance. Beliefs don't have to be reasonable. There's a shitload of unreasonable beliefs out there.
One who doesn't know that buildings can fall down, cannot believe that they won't.
— creativesoul
False, for the same reason. — Sapientia
What you call trivial is crucial to understanding what you later called "mimicry". His argument is about grammar/syntax. I've shown that it doesn't always make sense to add "ed" as a suffix to a noun. — creativesoul
Now, it is commonplace to say that one believed this or that. However, saying that John believed something is nothing more than saying that John had belief. The mimicry continues...
If John had fleas, he had fleas.
It's not so much mimicry as it is a refutation. Saying that if John had belief, he believed something is nothing more than saying the same thing differently.
John has belief. — creativesoul
Can you show me where he claimed or implied that it always makes sense to add "-ed" as a suffix to a noun? Looks like a strawman to me. — Sapientia
Reasons do not make things true/false. — creativesoul
It's not a point about unreasonable beliefs. — creativesoul
It's a point about what it takes in order to even be able to believe that some event or other will not happen. It's impossible to believe that X will not happen if the agent does not already believe that X can happen. — creativesoul
Belief is accrued. — creativesoul
It would be better put that a cat walking down the street acts as if it does not believe that the buildings will fall as compared/contrasted with it believes that the building will not fall. — creativesoul
If you cannot see the difference, there's not much more I can do to help you understand what I'm saying. If you do, then we can further parse it out... — creativesoul
He added "ed" to belief. He need not claim anything at all. He did it. — creativesoul
You don't need to repeat or explain your point. You need to deal with my criticism of it. — Sapientia
Your criticism shows a lack of understanding and is nothing more than gratuitous assertion. A hand-waving gesture. You may as well just say that you do not agree and leave it at that, because claiming that certain things I've written are "irrelevant" shows that you do not understand the relevance of what I've been arguing here.
The thread is about belief. I suspect that you're working from an utterly inadequate notion thereof. — creativesoul
What assertion of mine are you objecting to? Nevermind that it's an invalid objection. — creativesoul
Don't slip into ad hom Sapientia. Make this count. — creativesoul
What more is there to this purported 'something' that John believed aside from John's belief? — creativesoul
What assertion of mine are you objecting to? Nevermind that it's an invalid objection.
— creativesoul
I don't know why you're having trouble following the exchange. I was referring to your assertion that one who doesn't know or believe that cars can explode, cannot believe that they won't. Or, alternatively, (although it makes no real difference), your assertion that one who doesn't know that buildings can fall down, cannot believe that they won't. — Sapientia
Believing an event will not happen is belief about the event.
Do you agree? — creativesoul
That is the point. — creativesoul
Belief that an event will not happen is belief about the event. The event is what happens. The belief is that what happens (the event) will not. If the agent does not first know what can happen (the event), then there is no way possible for it to believe that it will not... for there is nothing in the agent's thought/belief system for them to believe will not happen. — creativesoul
Belief that an event will not happen is belief about the event. The event is what happens. The belief is that what happens(the event) will not. If the agent does not first know what can happen(the event), then there is no way possible for it to believe that it will not... for there is nothing in the agent's thought/belief system for them to believe will not happen. — creativesoul
One who doesn't know(believe) that cars can explode cannot believe that they won't. — creativesoul
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