...incidentally summoning @Mww."Space and time are merely the forms of our sensible intuition of objects. — RussellA
Does language have no rules or does it have "competing rules"? What "competing rules" does language have? — Luke
How is this different to the game of chess? It is not as though people are forced to play chess against their will by the deterministic laws of nature, or that they are physically unable to make illegal moves. Chess is also "shaped...by freely chosen activities of free willing beings", yet it is still a game for all that, and has rules too. — Luke
As I believe in reductive physicalism, in that I believe that the mind and body are ontologically indiscernible, for me, the mind cannot be prior to spatial existence — RussellA
Luke is doing a fine job of pointing out the mess that Meta has made for himself. — Banno
I have stated that language does not require rules — Metaphysician Undercover
The differences in rules are varied. What is legal in some countries is illegal in others. Some philosophies promote violation of the law of excluded middle, some promote violation of the law of noncontradiction. Different languages have developed different grammatical structures. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, some never play chess, because they choose not to. But we really do not have such a choice in the case of language, due to the necessities of nature. — Metaphysician Undercover
We freely choose whether or not we want to play chess, and if one decides to play, one must adhere to the rules when making moves. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point being that there is language outside of rules. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you give us an example of language without grammar? — Fooloso4
present discussion between Luke and @Metaphysician Undercover? — Banno
How can an intuition be calculably curved by a mass? — Banno
We can imagine different types of space, but we cannot imagine no space — RussellA
Well, that's just not right, in the sense you set out. We don't only see some colours in the world, from 380nm to 700nm. We can see infrared, x-ray, microwaves - hell, gravity waves and individual electrons.The mind only perceives a fraction of what exists in the world — RussellA
...determined...What the mind is able to perceive has been determined by evolution — RussellA
But see Davidson, On the very idea of a conceptual scheme.Equations model the world — RussellA
It's a reasonably coherent picture, but it's misguided.Summary — RussellA
When we perceive the world, we perceive parts and the relationships between those parts. — RussellA
What necessity forces you to use language? People can choose not to use language as freely as they can choose not to play chess. — Luke
Can you give us an example of language without grammar? — Fooloso4
So now you are saying that those rules for language, the ones it doesn't have, also vary from one language to another. — Banno
You started by claiming that language had no rules, but when this was shown to be silly, you have slid to claiming they are an emergent feature. — Banno
I don't deny that there are rules in language, that's what formal logic is all about. — Metaphysician Undercover
This question is not relevant because "grammar" does not necessarily imply "rules" — Metaphysician Undercover
I never said language does not have rules. — Metaphysician Undercover
language is not a game consisting of rules. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hmmm. Excuse my error, then. — Banno
Now let's position the "system of believe" relative to the true doubt. The doubting person cannot be "within" the system of believe because that would mean that the system is already accepted by that person. The doubt must be aimed at the system as a whole, because as "a system" we must assume that there is consistency between the parts (individual beliefs) of the system, and one cannot reasonably doubt one part of a consistent system. So true doubt must be directed at the system as a whole.
Would you agree with that? If we say doubt can only occur from within a system of belief, that system of belief must be other than the system being doubted. The two systems may not even be remotely related. So the assumption "doubt can occur only within a system of believe", is really an irrelevant point, because that system of belief must be other than the one which contains the belief being doubted.. And if we take the game analogy, true doubt can only come from the person who refuses to play the game, because to play the game is to consent to the rules, and to consent to the rules is to forfeit your right to doubt them. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's how what I stated above is relevant to this thread. If we assume that any specific language-game is a representation of a system of beliefs (consistency being a necessary requirement of "system"), then true doubt can only be directed at any specific language game from outside that particular game. I.e. the person who refuses to play. I'll call that person the skeptic, is the only one who may cast true doubt. If we assert that the skeptic must pose one's doubt from a position of being within a language-game, within a system of beliefs, then that system providing the skeptic's approach, must be other than the one doubted, and there cannot be consistency between these distinct language-games, or else true doubt would be impossible. This implies that language in general, as a whole, cannot be represented as a single language-game, because of the inconsistency between distinct language-games which makes true doubt a real thing.
The other course we could take, is to allow inconsistency within any specific language-game, and system of belief, thereby allowing for doubt within the system. If there is inconsistency within the game, or system, then doubt from within would be true justified doubt. But that ought to be seen as epistemologically unsound, to allow inconsistency to inhere within a system. It produces a faulty definition of "game" or "system", one in which the rules of the "game" contradict each other, or the "system" has parts which oppose each other, or are not conducive to its function.
So the logical course is to maintain that a language-game, or a system of beliefs, is necessarily consistent, and true doubt must be directed at the system as a whole, from outside that system. This is also the most practical solution, because if inconsistency appears to inhere within a system of beliefs, it is extremely difficult to isolate the defective parts, with the goal of doubting just those parts. So the entire system must be doubted as a whole. This implies that refusal to play the game is required, and we're at the point of doubting the entire system anyway. — Metaphysician Undercover
I explained very clearly why doubting the entire belief system is the only reasonable form of skepticism. Beliefs within a system are necessarily logically consistent and interrelated. That's what makes it a "system". To doubt one belief within a system requires doubting the beliefs it is dependent upon, and it is implied that the beliefs dependent upon the doubted belief are doubted as well. So it's unreasonable to doubt one belief without doubting the entire system within which it is integrated,
This is why the idea that there are hinge propositions which are somehow indubitable is unacceptable epistemology. If the entire system is intrinsically consistent, and valid, which it must be to be a "system", then no part of the system can be doubted without doubting the whole. And this would require doubting the supposed hinge propositions as well.
The preceding result, is the logical conclusion of assuming that beliefs exist as part of a "system". If we remove that premise, and allow that beliefs have individuality, free from the influence of an overall system, then it is reasonable to doubt individual beliefs. But then the whole game analogy, and the idea of hinge propositions is completely inapplicable. . — Metaphysician Undercover
A belief system must be coherent to fulfill the conditions of being a "system". This means that if one belief within the system is dubious, then the entire system is dubious due to all the beliefs being related through coherency. So it makes no sense to say that some beliefs within the system are dubious but the foundational ones, hinge propositions cannot be doubted. This is like taking a deductive argument, and saying that the logic is valid, the conclusion is dubious, but the premises are beyond doubt. If the logic is valid, we cannot doubt the conclusion without doubting the premises. — Metaphysician Undercover
But then it is incorrect to call this a "system", that's the whole point. If we move away from the "system" representation, to the "big, baggy monster of ways that people do things" representation, then the idea of hinge propositions makes no sense at all, because there is no system for them to be supporting. If there are systems, then the systems themselves must be coherent, so to doubt any aspect of the system implies a doubt of the entire system, including any supposed hinge propositions. Either way, the notion of hinge propositions which are beyond doubt is fundamentally incorrect. That's why Kuhnian paradigm shifts are a reality, the entire system along with its foundations must be dismissed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hume and Locke — frank
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