Philosophically, beliefs do not have the solidity needed to ground explanations for our actions. — Banno
Well, I don't know what "standard" is, but given such a broad definition of introspection then I would have to agree. It's often said that we cannot be mistaken about what we feel, or about how things, in the most direct of senses, seem to us, and I mostly agree with that. But I question the notion that we have infallible access to the "contents of our minds", because 'contents' and 'states' always become mixed up with lingually based conceptual narratives that are acquired from the public realm. — Janus
I would tend to say that I know what kind of person I am, not from "looking within" but from thinking about how I have interacted with others, and what I tend to think about others. The other point is that, for me at least, paying attention to what I am thinking is not a form of inspection or looking, much less introspection or looking within, but a matter of listening to a voice. — Janus
If one were to examine a particular belief wouldn't one find it bound to a sea of inter-related beliefs? — frank
Indeed. I'll give you one guess what the operative mechanism of that inter-relation is... — creativesoul
Saying things like "This key unlocks the door" is of course one of the actions affiliated to the belief that the key unlocks the door. As is saying it to yourself. Or thinking it. — Banno
Now I'm not sure what you are suggesting, but it appears you think that beliefs are in some sense to be understood as a purely mental phenomena; that the state of the world is not relevant to what one believes. — Banno
This is usually framed in terms of beliefs being either internal or external. I'm now leaning towards an external approach, after having started this thread with an internalist approach, as given in the OP. But I have one eye towards some sort of dissolution of this apparent schism.
It would be interesting to hear your view. — Banno
At first blush, that may seem crazy. However, think on it a bit. There can be no introspection without language. Language is social. Introspection requires others. — creativesoul
I think language and possibly cultural symbols are like a musical instrument that's inherited. I think that what I am is basically like a theme album with certain recurring refrains played on that instrument. I have some ability to decide what's being played, but there are underlying currents to it that have to play out no matter what I might want. — frank
If I try to directly feel my own being, I don't feel anything. Like music, what's happening now takes on meaning in the context of what's been before, so my view is parallel to yours. — frank
The underlying themes would be what is subconsciously determinative of my being and doing? — Janus
So, I think it's right that what's happening in the most immediate present is articulated (takes on meaning) in terms of the past (as continuity) and also as what is itself now past — Janus
Indeed. I'll give you one guess what the operative mechanism of that inter-relation is...
— creativesoul
I think the inter-relatedness of beliefs is a manifestation of logic. Or that's not quite right. I want to say that it actually is logic.
What is logic? One way to show what it is would be to point to the necessary inter-relatedness of beliefs.
What's your take? — frank
At first blush and after consideration, it seems crazily mistaken. And I think that it is crazily mistaken or you mean something other than what I think you mean, based on what you've said. You aren't exactly helping with these really broad and ambiguous statements like, "Language is social", and, "Introspection requires others". Statements like that ought to be qualified, clarified, explained... not just spurted out and left there in confusion. It's not very difficult to think of a sense where both of those statements are obviously wrong. Being a bookworm is commonly associated with being antisocial. And surely you won't deny that you and I can both introspect on our own, without others around. That's not mere speculation, it's demonstrably true. And I don't agree with your first premise, either. This reasoning of yours seems like it's based on some kind of post hoc fallacy and/or hasty generalisation. — Sapientia
Well, after giving it some thought, and as is consistent with what I've said above, I would say that it isn't either one or the other, but both, in a sense. That is, they're internal, in a sense, and external, in a different sense. A complete picture of belief requires both. — Sapientia
Consider mind as the interaction of brains and world. Your belief that the your key fits the door is part of a web of ways in which your mind interacts with keys and doors... and where the boundary between belief and knowledge and certainty and doubt and intent lies is in a state of flux. — Banno
p1 Introspection requires language.
p2 Language is social.
C1 Introspection requires that which is social.(from p1 and p2)
p3 Being social requires others(by definition)
C2 Introspection requires others(from C1 and p3) — creativesoul
But there's also another sense where they're not really mental or phenomena at all, but more like a status or a fact about me in relation to other things. My beliefs are a set of the things of which I am convinced, and they do not cease to exist or cease to be my beliefs when, e.g. I go to sleep. Although they do cease to be my beliefs if I am no longer convinced of them. — Sapientia
In any case the take-home from psychology is that introspection is not provelidged. — Banno
O wad some Power the giftie gie us
To see oursels as ithers see us!
It wad frae mony a blunder free us,
An' foolish notion:
Must introspection be either infallible or non-existent? No middle ground? — Srap Tasmaner
What part are you objecting to, and would you offer a valid form of objection? — creativesoul
By the way, aside from your characterizations about the argument here, nothing you've said conflicts with the argument. — creativesoul
A complete picture of "belief" requires eliminating the talk about different senses by virtue of effectively combining and subsequently exhausting all. — creativesoul
All belief is existentially dependent upon both the internal and the external. There is no belief without both and a creature capable of connecting the two. — creativesoul
Sapientia, how can you be pleased with both? Surely you must accept one side or the other, or reject the dilemma. — Banno
Holding a belief is acting in some ways and not in others. — Banno
Other folk are as likely to fathom your beliefs as you are to introspect them. — Banno
Hence it is erroneous to give some sort of primacy to beliefs that one commits to as a result of introspection. — Banno
One can be wrong about what one believes. — Banno
Consider mind as the interaction of brains and world. Your belief that the your key fits the door is part of a web of ways in which your mind interacts with keys and doors... and where the boundary between belief and knowledge and certainty and doubt and intent lies is in a state of flux. — Banno
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.