• Banno
    25k
    In so far as a belief might provide a motive, that motive remains inscrutable. But that does not rule out premeditation.
  • frank
    15.8k
    I wasnt thinking that belief provides a motive. Belief would appear to be necessary to the existence of motive.

    And if motive "remains" inscrutable, does that mean that you think it usually is? The rest of the world tends to assume it's very scrutable.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    A distinction needs to be drawn between belief statements and belief,
    — creativesoul

    Perhaps; remind me of how you do this.
    Banno

    All statements are predication. All predication is correlation. Not all correlation is predication. All correlation is belief. Not all belief is predication. Not all belief is belief statements.
  • Banno
    25k
    All correlation is belief.creativesoul

    because...?
  • creativesoul
    12k
    That's just the way it is.

    Oddly worded question my friend. Would you ask the same if I had asserted all belief presupposes it's own truth?

    Are you asking me how I arrived at that claim?
  • Banno
    25k
    it’s just that your conclusion is at odds with the fact that any and every belief can be put in the form of a propositional attitude. So you have gone wrong somewhere.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    Remember that distinction between reports of belief and belief. Putting a belief into the form of a propositional attitude does two remarkable things. It changes the form of belief while reporting upon it.

    To quite the contrary my friend, it's others who've gone wrong.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    Remember Jack has belief but no capability to have an attitude towards a statement/proposition. That is one of the problems with the earlier conception of "belief". Belief as propositional attitude cannot admit of pre-linguistic and/or non-linguistic belief.

    Animals without written language have belief. That conception of "belief"(as propositional attitude) contradicts the way things are. There is no stronger justificatory ground for dismissal. That's a misconception.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    What needs done here is painstaking. Taxonomy.

    I would agree that belief statements can be put in form of propositional attitude. Not all belief consists of predication. As before...

    There's more nuance than the discussion has gleaned thus far. It has been hinted at and skirted around...

    It's a matter of complexity.
  • Banno
    25k
    I would agree that belief statements can be put in form of propositional attitude. Not all belief consists of predication. As before...creativesoul

    You don't see this as contradictory. OK. You think a belief can be both an attitude towards a proposition and yet not consist in a predication, as if a proposition need not be a predication. And yet you also say
    All statements are predication.creativesoul
    .

    I don't find that at all helpful.
  • Banno
    25k
    An individual's belief is inscrutable
    I tried to defend the notion that to believe something is to act as if it is true. It didn't work, because one can act in ways contrary to one's beliefs. It's a result of the lack of symmetry between beliefs and actions mentioned above - Beliefs explain but do not determine actions. Thanks due to Hanover.

    Any belief can be made to account for any action, by adding suitable auxiliary beliefs.
    Banno

    The parallel here is of course with the Quinean notion of the inscrutability of reference. Undetached rabbit-part.

    https://www.rit.edu/cla/philosophy/quine/inscrutability_reference.html

    Now as Davidson noted, we make maximum sense of the words and thoughts of others when we interpret in a way that optimises agreement. So we also make maximum sense of the beliefs of others when we interpret in a way that optimises agreement.

    So even though as @Hanover pointed out we may never get it right, we might get close enough to make no difference.
  • Banno
    25k
    what would turn a desire to find my keys into a desire to look for them in the kitchen?Srap Tasmaner

    Perhaps remembering that you last say them in the kitchen.

    We have beliefs because we sometimes hold things to be true that are actually not true - we are sometimes wrong. It turns out to be useful to be able to say that "I searched the kitchen because I believed the keys were there", as opposed to "I searched the kitchen because the keys were there".

    Yeah, because he believed that there was a good chance his keys were there.Sapientia

    Probability?

    I don't think so. I think we are using belief here simply to mark the fact that the keys might not be in the kitchen.
  • Hanover
    12.9k
    So even though as Hanover pointed out we may never get it right, we might get close enough to make no difference.Banno

    Then meaning is not use. Meaning is your internal idea approximated in the picture you paint through utterances, gestures, or an actual picture. Some are better at painting pictures and are easily and accurately understood and some are better at interpreting and understanding what is being conveyed, but others not.

    Pragmatically, as you point out, it probably overall doesn't matter terribly. We do, in the end, generally communicate well. But to your linguistic theory that hinges on the idea that the use of the word is its public meaning, does not this concession do much violence? Aren't we now admitting that "rock" means my phenomenal impression of rocks, and my public use of that term is not its meaning, but just a close approximation?
  • frank
    15.8k
    Then meaning is not use.Hanover

    When seeking meaning it's wise to look to use. Where "meaning is use" is used as shorthand for behaviorism, it's wrong.
  • Hanover
    12.9k
    When seeking meaning it's wise to look to use.frank

    Sure, but who disagrees with this? Is all we're saying now is that meaning isn't use, but use is just one thing to consider when trying to figure out what someone means?
  • frank
    15.8k
    Sure, but who disagrees with this?Hanover

    Yes it's pretty obvious.
  • Banno
    25k
    Then meaning is not use. Meaning is your internal idea approximated in the picture you paint through utterances, gestures, or an actual picture. Some are better at painting pictures and are easily and accurately understood and some are better at interpreting and understanding what is being conveyed, but others not.Hanover

    Nice. But just as meaning is a construal from use, belief is a construal from use. What we can get closer to is agreement, not meaning.
  • creativesoul
    12k
    I would agree that belief statements can be put in form of propositional attitude. Not all belief consists of predication. As before...
    — creativesoul

    You don't see this as contradictory. OK. You think a belief can be both an attitude towards a proposition and yet not consist in a predication, as if a proposition need not be a predication. And yet you also say
    All statements are predication.
    — creativesoul
    .

    I don't find that at all helpful.
    Banno

    Try drawing and maintaining the distinction between belief and belief statements. That would be most helpful.

    Belief can be put into the form of an attitude towards a proposition. That is not to say that all belief can be. Belief statements can be. Not all belief are belief statements.

    The interesting thing about putting belief into the form of a propositional attitude is that in doing so we're changing the form...
  • creativesoul
    12k


    So...

    We have belief, belief statements, and belief reports...

    Reports account for that which existed prior to the report. "I believe" is always followed by belief statement(when uttered by a sincere speaker). "S/he believes" is always followed by a belief report. The two can be one in the same, but not necessarily. Hence the distinction.

    Belief statements are statements uttered by a sincere speaker, whether just talking or reporting upon their own and/or another's belief. Belief reports take an account of belief. Belief statements can be false if they contradict fact. Belief reports can be false if they contradict the belief being reported upon.

    An insincere speaker offers a false account of his/her own belief(for what is stated is not what is believed). Your earlier account of Jack's belief conflated your report(which consisted of statements) with Jack's belief(which does not; cannot).

    Is that helpful enough?
  • creativesoul
    12k
    It may be worth noting that some belief(particularly those about the rules of language) may be nothing more than an attitude towards a proposition.

    I'm being reminded of Gettier and complexity. When the simplest explanation suffices, it would behoove us all to place a measure of good value upon such. To the contrary when an explanation is inadequate, it ought be well noted.

    Where complexity increases with regard to belief hierarchy, so too does possibility for mistake. That is to say that with regard to both, the belief itself and a report of it. Gettier Case II oversimplifies Smith's belief. It amounts to an incomplete and thus a false report. Salva Veritate.

    That's an aside though. Well, sort of...
  • Hanover
    12.9k
    What we can get closer to is agreement, not meaning.Banno

    But unlike a Platonic ideal, meaning exists as a real qualitative state, known by the person holding it. Agreement is therefore unilateral, where the holder of the idea assents to the reiteration of the meaning by the other person. Meaning is therefore primary and critical, existing prior to agreement (i.e. unilateral assent) and it forms the very basis of the agreement.

    This understanding makes the qualitative state worthy of discussion (metaphysics) as does it make pre-lingual meaning relevant.

    How does this affect your Wittgensteinian approach if accepted as true?
  • S
    11.7k
    Probability?

    I don't think so. I think we are using belief here simply to mark the fact that the keys might not be in the kitchen.
    Banno

    So, Pat searched the kitchen, but not because he believed that there was a good chance his keys were there? Then why did he search the kitchen?

    Look, if it ain't broke, don't try to fix it. That's what I say. The common sense explanation works: it's most likely and most plausible. Your seeking an alternative explanation therefore makes little sense. It won't work as well. Is your motive to seek the best explanation or one which is unconventional?
  • Banno
    25k
    ...meaning exists as a real qualitative state, known by the person holding it.Hanover

    I don't agree. Meaning, so far as it has any meaning, is constructed by folks doing stuff.

    Consider the notion of a unilateral agreement. It's oxymoronic.

    Consider the use of "real" in "real qualitative state"; what is it doing there? What sort of thing could it be opposed to, an unreal qualitative state? What could that be? a false qualitative state? An illusory qualitative state? Such things make no sense.
  • Banno
    25k
    So, Pat searched the kitchen, but not because he believed that there was a good chance his keys were there? Then why did he search the kitchen?Sapientia

    Let's get back on track. If the keys are in the kitchen, we say "the keys are in the kitchen" or, perhaps even "it is true that the keys are in the kitchen" in order to really push the point.

    We sometimes use talk of belief to distinguish what is true from what is false - I searched the kitchen because I believed the keys were there, but as it turns out I was wrong.

    Compare:
    Pat searched the kitchen because he believed that his keys were there.

    with
    Pat searched the kitchen because there was a good chance his keys were there.

    The notion of belief is used to bring out the difference between the keys being in the kitchen and one's thinking that the keys are in the kitchen - between being true and being acknowledged or accepted as true.

    Now I take that to be the very common sense explanation you seem to think I deny.
  • Sam26
    2.7k
    I don't agree. Meaning, so far as it has any meaning, is constructed by folks doing stufBanno

    I take it by "doing stuff," so to speak, that it's "doing stuff" in a particular way, i.e., one can do stuff, but the stuff we're doing may still lack meaning, even when it appears to have meaning. For example, Wittgenstein criticized philosophers for doing stuff, because some of it lacked sense. Note also, and I think we agree on this, that many threads appear to be "doing stuff," and yet, much of it is senseless. As I've gone through Wittgenstein's PI recently, I began to see much more complexity to the "meaning as use" idea.

    I pointed out in another thread that use doesn't always translate into meaning, but that if we want to learn what it is to mean something, then use is the place to start. I say start because of the complexity behind Wittgenstein's ideas. I think sometimes we can oversimplify his ideas.

    This is not a criticism of your point, but only an added observation.
  • Banno
    25k
    A fair comment.

    I think I may have to go back to Anscombe's Intention.
  • Sam26
    2.7k
    If I were you I would concentrate on primary source material. The best way to understand Wittgenstein is to read Wittgenstein. Secondary sources are important, but I think we can rely to much on them.
  • Sam26
    2.7k
    What's been fun for me, is to read and study Wittgenstein, then to compare my interpretation with others who are experts. It's exciting to learn that your interpretation is one that the experts also have, or you see where you disagree with the experts. Whatever the case may be, you've thought it through yourself.
  • Shawn
    13.2k


    Same here. That's my preferred method of communication and learning. It's very tedious and cumbersome though. Not something that will ever allow you to succeed in college. Maybe if you were ultra fast at this method, which I am not.
  • Sam26
    2.7k
    Same here. That's my preferred method of communication and learning. It's very tedious and cumbersome though. Not something that will ever allow you to succeed in college. Maybe if you were ultra fast at this method, which I am not.Posty McPostface

    You do need some background, so I wouldn't recommend trying to do it if you don't know much about Wittgenstein. The Tractatus, for example, is one of the most difficult works in philosophy, so it's very difficult to read and to think you'll understand it. Many philosophers have misunderstood Wittgenstein's works.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.