Anyone can piece together a few premises and draw a conclusion. — Sapientia
No. I'm not kidding. Valid refutation is required. — creativesoul
Introspection is thinking about one's own mental ongoings(one's own thought and belief). In order to even be able to think about one's own thought and belief, thought and belief must be prior to thinking about it, and there must be a means of identifying, isolating, and further assessing it. That means is language. We use the terms "mental ongoings", "thought", "belief", etc.
With me yet? — creativesoul
Please do. — creativesoul
All belief is meaningful. All meaning is attributed. All attribution of meaning requires something to become symbol, something to become symbolized, and a creature capable of connecting the two. All belief requires something to become symbol, something to become symbolized, and a creature capable of connecting the two. The connecting of the symbol to what's symbolized is the attribution of meaning and constitutes being meaningful thought and/or belief formation itself. At conception there is no mental faculty capable of attributing meaning.
At conception there is neither thought nor belief. — creativesoul
Thus, the literature reviewed in this section can be interpreted as suggesting that the causes of our behavior are not, after all, the sorts of things to which we have introspective access.
What do you mean? Holding a belief is simply holding a belief: being convinced of something. Of course, we'd expect people to act in a certain way as a result of their beliefs. But that's not what holding a belief is. Did you mean the former or the latter? I have no problem with the former, although that differs from what you actually said, which seems plain wrong, as Michael's reaction attests. — Sapientia
Seems what little progress we made has here been rescinded. "Holding a belief is simply holding a belief" says nothing, does nothing, gets us nowhere. Denying the empirical data leaves this line of enquiry with no place to go. Saying "No" over and over is not doing philosophy. — Banno
Now, what empirical data are you suggesting that I'm denying? — Sapientia
Thus, the literature reviewed in this section can be interpreted as suggesting that the causes of our behavior are not, after all, the sorts of things to which we have introspective access.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/introspection/#EmpEviAccInt — Banno
Beliefs explain but do not determine actions
Beliefs are used to explain actions. Further, such explanations are causal and sufficient. So if we have appropriate desires and a beliefs we can explain an action.
So, given that John is hungry, and that John believes eating a sandwich will remove his hunger, we have a sufficient causal explanation for why John ate the sandwich.
One may act in ways that are contrary to one's beliefs. A dissident may comply in order to protect herself and her family.
So given that John is hungry, and has a sandwich at hand, it does not follow that John will eat the sandwich. — Banno
It is apparent that the analysis in the OP is insufficient in that it just takes it for granted that John 's belief that he is hungry is infallible.
Is it? Do you have a definite opinion on this, or are you, like me, looking for some way to reconcile an apparent contrast? — Banno
Well, how often have you mistakenly believed that you were hungry? — Sapientia
Thus, the literature reviewed in this section can be interpreted as suggesting that the causes of our behavior are not, after all, the sorts of things to which we have introspective access.
Are you hungry, or thirsty? Or a bit depressed and looking for solace in a bite? Or really just wishing not to offend your host? That's the upshot of the psychology; we are not as good at judging as we like to think we are.
That's the empirical evidence. — Banno
Access is not always guaranteed, but to say that we don't have any access is surely mistaken. — Sapientia
There are times when I know why I behaved a certain way. — Sapientia
I'm hungry right now, without a doubt. That's direct evidence, and it's stronger than anything that you have to offer. I haven't eaten since I had a sandwich at what is now yesterday afternoon. I had nothing for dinner. The time on my clock presently reads 1:43am. That's plenty of evidence. — Sapientia
Access to what, exactly? The really, truly, true belief? — Banno
Sure. And when you do this, are you introducing some belief to explain your behaviour? — Banno
Notice how much more than just the sensation of hunger is at play here? All that other stuff about how you relate to the world. Is your belief just one part of this? Or is all of this part of your belief? — Banno
The conclusion seems to me to be that some mental state, called a belief, is in itself inadequate to explain what we do. — Banno
Talk of my door key makes sense in relation to me, my body, my key, my door, my house, the world... — Sapientia
Can you please just explain, clearly and adequately... ...why you think that introspection or metacognition requires language and others? — Sapientia
Beliefs are not mental states Banno. — creativesoul
But a belief is something apart from just talk, isn't it? — Banno
What is it? Not an invention or useful fiction - although the empirical evidence shows that it can be such a rationalisation... — Banno
We push each other to the extremes of our positions. What do we agree on?
Which of these are you happy with?
A belief can form part of the explanation for a behaviour
Our introspections of our beliefs are not infallible; we may be mistaken as to why we did something
Given a specific action there are innumerable possible beliefs that might explain it
We are not as good at judging our beliefs as we think we are
Beliefs cannot stand alone - they must be understood in terms of one's other beliefs
One can doubt what one believes
Access to our beliefs is not always guaranteed
We can be mistaken as to why we acted in some particular way. — Banno
Beliefs are not mental states Banno.
— creativesoul
Put simply, that's not how most philosophers talk. — Banno
Sapientia is evidently hung up on the idea that he can think about his own thought and belief when no one else is around, and dubiously concludes that others aren't required for introspection.
What he doesn't seem to understand is that the only reason that he can do that is because he already speaks language. That is... because of others. — creativesoul
...please, let this be a lesson — Sapientia
Mirror, mirror... — creativesoul
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