So let me phrase it this way. If a scale produces the symbol "250", is the display telling me that I weigh 250? Apparently, no, something else is by means of the display. The display tells me nothing. The something else is telling me my weight by means of the display.If I write you a note saying "The cat is on the mat" is the note telling you that the cat is on the mat? No. I am. By means of the note. The note is telling you nothing. I am telling you something by means of the note. — Bartricks
Sure, the scale is designed. But the designer is not telling me I weigh 250. So, sorry, no. It's not the designer of the scale.First, they're designed. — Bartricks
Okay, great. But how does that work, given "notes" (the display showing 250) don't tell me things?Second, I have not denied that one can acquire true beliefs from bot-created faculties. — Bartricks
Not always; in this case I am, but (I tell you no lie) my cat quite often steps onto the scales spontaneously. It's an inside joke with my s.o.; when I say, "our cat weighs 15", my s.o. immediately knows the real underlying meaning is simply that the cat stepped onto the digital scales again. I seriously doubt my cat is interested in weighing anything when doing so. Nevertheless, that 15 still represents the weight of my cat.Third, you are using the scales - or 'scales' if we suppose them to be a flukey product of blind natural forces - to acquire information about your weight. — Bartricks
Nevertheless, when that display simply shows "15" when my cat is on it, that represents the weight of my cat. Or let me phrase it this way... the "15" that shows up on the digital scale is not being used by an agent to tell me what my cat weighs. But it still nevertheless represents the weight of my cat.I mean, let's imagine that, ...You have acquired a true belief about your weight, but you have not been told it. — Bartricks
No.As to your second point, so you think the clouds are agents? — Bartricks
You have assumed blind natural forces cannot produce awareness. Agents have awareness.I have not, note, assumed that natural forces cannot create agents. — Bartricks
Yes, you're begging the question. We'll get to that later.I am arguing that your faculties need to have been designed to tell you about the world if you are to be told about the world via them. — Bartricks
The note in this case is "15". It was produced when my cat stepped onto the scale. But apparently it cannot tell me anything. Nevertheless, 15 represents the weight of my cat.If I write you a note saying "The cat is on the mat" is the note telling you that the cat is on the mat? No. I am. By means of the note. The note is telling you nothing. I am telling you something by means of the note. — Bartricks
No. I am challenging your messed up notions of semantics here. I quoted the same exact quote where you messed it up in this thread.And you are trying to challenge that with a weighing machine that is designed to give you information about your weight?!? — Bartricks
And yet, the scale produces the symbols 15; and those symbols represent the weight of my cat. So apparently all those things the scale isn't doing, and doesn't have, don't have anything to do with the symbols representing the weight of my cat, since 15 does in fact represent the weight of my cat.When I write you a note, the note isn't telling you anything. It doesn't have a little mouth or desires that you know things. — Bartricks
JTB's are TB's, but TB's aren't necessarily JTB's, so:Er, yes. A justified true belief is still a true belief. So your 'no' was incorrect. — Bartricks
...my no correctly refutes that wrong part.You acquire a true belief about your cat's weight, that's all. — Bartricks
And yes, the belief is justified. Relevance? — Bartricks
The symbols "15" produced by the scale represent the weight of my cat because my cat's weighing 15 causally relates to the symbols "15" being produced on that display. The symbols "250" on your weird plant thing is unrelated to my weight being 250. So the fluke note does not represent my weight. The "15" on my digital scale by contrast does represent my cat's weight.And when you step on it it emits a seed that is paper-like and has squiggles on it that look, by fluke, like'your weight is 250'. — Bartricks
Nope. But digital scales can show representations of weights using symbols.Do weight machines greet you now? — Bartricks
I think this counteranalysis misses two major points.At first the analysis we might give here is that the reason you don't 'know' that there is a pie in your oven is that it was just coincidental that the clouds formed those shapes and that the belief these shapes caused you to acquire was in fact true. — Bartricks
I do have some sympathy for your frustrations. — Foghorn
The following theory might help?
The more insightful an idea, the smaller the audience. — Foghorn
You are brilliant and everyone else is stupid. — Foghorn
Demonstrating that some E can produce x that isn't y cannot reasonably be a demonstration that E cannot produce y. "E can produce x" is a capability. "E cannot produce y" is a limitation. x not being y is nowhere close to demonstrating said capability implies said limitation. — InPitzotl
The alleged argument for this premise is about the capability of unguided evolutionary forces providing things that don't convey information to us. What has that argument to do with that premise? — InPitzotl
Er, yes. A justified true belief is still a true belief. So your 'no' was incorrect.
— Bartricks
JTB's are TB's, but TB's aren't necessarily JTB's, so:
You acquire a true belief about your cat's weight, that's all.
— Bartricks
...my no correctly refutes that wrong part. — InPitzotl
Thinking higher thoughts (not focusing on chemicals for example) is good is it leads to character building. But nobody really knowns what "God" is so atheists can sometimes be the greatest believers of them all: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ch-DliKSGu0 — Gregory
Do you know what a 'state with representative contents' is? — Bartricks
Perception happens by means of them. — Bartricks
Do you know what a 'state with representative contents' is?
— Bartricks
Yes.
Perception happens by means of them.
— Bartricks
Are you sure about that, — Sir2u
if it is not evolution that has made it possible for us to perceive, what is the agent that is sending it to us? — Sir2u
If you bake that into your concept of perception, which is fair, then sure.In order to be able to perceive a world one needs to be subject to mental states with representative contents, yes? — Bartricks
Sure.in order for a mental state to be said (vulgarly) to 'represent' something to be the case, there would need to be an agent who is doing the representing in question. — Bartricks
This doesn't work. That you're trying to tell me about a cat isn't in question, so let's grant that immediately. But for you to succeed in your intent to inform me there is a cat via that note, you have to have written symbols on that paper that would convey that notion. Not all symbols do that; only particular symbols do that.The note is not telling you anything; I am telling you about the cat via the note. — Bartricks
Well yeah, because you made a point regarding truth in the OP with respect to the sky writing (truth by fluke). But you were also talking about information being conveyed. So consider "the cat is on the mat". That's just a bunch of letters. But those letters have a meaning according to the rules of English; it's about some cat being "on" some mat. What it means for that statement to be true is for the semantic content behind those symbols to have valid referents. What it means for that statement to convey information regarding its truth to us (in the usual sense) is for those symbols to convey those semantic contents to us.What you are doing, it seems to me, is focussing on the fact that we can nevertheless acquire accurate and justified beliefs — Bartricks
For you to convey "the cat is on the mat" to me as a true statement, it is insufficient for you to intend to tell me the same. You must also somehow be aware of the referenced cat's being on a mat.The representing is done via them, but not by them. — Bartricks
Yes, I can tell how loose it is.They have to be being used - used by an agent - for that purpose or a sufficiently closely related one before they can be said to be 'representing' something to be the case (and again, even then, this is loose talk, for the state itself does not do any representing). — Bartricks
That's what perception does. There's an image on your retina. Something happens, and lo and behold... some mental state is formed about something that is a mental state such that you tend to have it if there were a cat there and not have it if there were no cat there. That is a mental state of "seeing a cat".So we can have two states that are introspectively indiscernible, and one can be representing something to be the case, and the other not. In order for us to be perceiving a world, our mental states - some of them - need to be representing there to be a world. — Bartricks
Sure; hallucinating cats isn't seeing cats.It is not sufficient that they be introspectively indiscernible from such states. They need actually to be representing something to be the case. — Bartricks
There's the question begging again.And they will not be doing this unless an agent got them to arise in us for that very purpose. — Bartricks
That's a difference without a meaning.If that is not the case - if our faculties have been forged by unguided natural forces - then although we will still acquire true beliefs about the world we are living in from them, we will not be perceiving the world, even though our situation would be introspectively indiscernible from what would be the case if we were. — Bartricks
That's what perception does. There's an image on your retina. Something happens, and lo and behold... some mental state is formed about something that is a mental state such that you tend to have it if there were a cat there and not have it if there were no cat there. That is a mental state of "seeing a cat". — InPitzotl
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