It's always the same question... — neomac
I'm asking you (7th time): in the belief report that you claim more accurate, namely "At time t1, Jack believes that broken clock was working.", I see 3 items: broken, clock, was working. Explain what each of them stands for. Start from was working. — neomac
At time t1, Jack believed that clock was working.
At time t1, Jack believed that broken clock was working.
You're claiming the first is more accurate. I'm claiming the second is.
Prior to continuing... Do you agree with that much? — creativesoul
Thus, when Jack's false belief is put into proper linguistic form, it will be impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
Jack can not knowingly believe that broken clock is working because “that broken clock is working” is a linguistic form of a contradiction. — neomac
...you should explain why it is impossible to knowingly believe it... — neomac
Jack believes that broken clock is working.
The above report is in proper linguistic form. It is accurate. It is true. It is impossible to knowingly believe that a broken clock is working. That's all that was meant by "proper linguistic form". Jack was mistaken. It is impossible to knowingly be. Thus, a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
At time t1, Jack believed that clock was working.
At time t1, Jack believed that broken clock was working.
You're claiming the first is more accurate. I'm claiming the second is. — creativesoul
a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
Jack cannot knowingly believe "that broken clock is working" is true — creativesoul
What grounds the truth of the claim — neomac
Jack was mistaken. It is impossible to knowingly be. Thus, a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
This is a perfect example of begging the question argument — neomac
...if only 1 is the accurate report of Jack’s mistaken belief, then your requirement is at best necessary... — neomac
Why are you changing the example again?
You should write: It is impossible to knowingly believe that broken clock is working
And not: It is impossible to knowingly believe that a broken clock is working. — neomac
You are conflating the content of my report with the content of Jack's belief.
The content of Jack's belief are correlations drawn by Jack between directly and indirectly perceptible things. That would include the broken clock and his wondering what time it was, amongst other things less relevant. — creativesoul
Which is all it takes to show how convention has been in error... — creativesoul
We can set all the other stuff aside for now and focus upon what counts as belief.
Then, we will see how much sense it makes to ascribe belief to another, because we will have some standard of belief for comparing our ascriptions/attribution to. — creativesoul
Belief consists entirely of meaningful correlations drawn between directly and/or indirectly perceptible things by a creature with the biological machinery capable of doing so. — creativesoul
Jack was mistaken. It is impossible to knowingly be. Thus, a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
It is impossible to knowingly believe that a broken clock is working, because if we know it is broken, we also know it is not working, and thus we cannot believe that it is. That has nothing to do with the sentence being a contradiction and everything to do with knowing that broken clocks do not work. — creativesoul
Jack was mistaken. It is impossible to knowingly be. Thus, a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
This is a perfect example of begging the question argument — neomac
:worry: — creativesoul
the non-propositional content you attribute to Jack is... ..."Jack believes that broken clock is working" — neomac
No, it is not.
You are conflating the content of my report with the content of Jack's belief. — creativesoul
Which is all it takes to show how convention has been in error...
— creativesoul
Well if we accept all your premises (and I haven't accepted any so far) maybe you are right... — neomac
I misunderstood your argument because this is how you presented it: — neomac
...we need your theory of meaning and truth... — neomac
What is the content of Jack's belief at time t1?
— creativesoul
I answered that already. Belief contents express the point of view... — neomac
Belief contents express the point of view...
— neomac — creativesoul
Has nothing to do with failing to read the next few lines... — creativesoul
Jack was mistaken. It is impossible to knowingly be. Thus, a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
Much, arguably most, of the groundwork has already been offered, here in this very discussion... — creativesoul
It makes no sense at all to me to say that the cat's belief has content that expresses the cat's point of view. — creativesoul
Belief consists entirely of meaningful correlations drawn between directly and/or indirectly perceptible things by a creature with the biological machinery capable of doing so. — creativesoul
While words are not propositions, on my view, the content of Jack's belief is not words either. The correlations he draws at the time as a means for believing what the clock says do not include language use. Those words are not being thought by Jack at time t1. Jack is wondering what time it is, so he looks towards a clock to know. That's the way it happens. This is well established habit, to the point of it's being nearly autonomous. That is to say that it is something done without much thought at all about the clock aside from believing what it says. We do not look to a clock and think silently or aloud "I believe that that clock is working". We just don't. That's just not how it works. That is a metacognitive endeavor. Believing a broken clock is not. — creativesoul
Belief contents express the point of view...
— neomac — creativesoul
This notion of "belief" cannot take account of language less, mistaken, and/or false belief.
A mistaken creature's point of view does not - dare I say, cannot - include the mistake. Hence, when we ask Jack at time t1, what he's doing immediately after looking at the clock, he will not say "I believe that that broken clock is working". Rather, he will say something about finding out what time it is/was.
He is unaware of being mistaken. He is unaware that he believes that a broken clock is working. From's Jack's point of view at time t1, the mistake is unknown.
Inform Jack of what he needs to know and upon recognizing his own mistake, he will readily admit to having made it unbeknownst to him at the time. He will readily admit to having once believed that that broken clock was working. — creativesoul
Jack was mistaken. It is impossible to knowingly be. Thus, a proper rendering of Jack's belief will come in a linguistic form that is impossible to knowingly believe. — creativesoul
A gifted shitshow consisting of a gross misattribution of meaning bordering on deliberate obfuscation... — creativesoul
I've much more important matters to be involved in. — creativesoul
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