In other words the world is not an object of perception but a complex conceptual schema. — Janus
I'm not saying the world as a whole could be false, but that even some things which are taken to be facts might turn out to be inconsistent with subsequent experience. — Janus
Our perceptions and conceptions evolve out of experience, individually and collectively. We know that we experience images, we never perceive whole things, and we never perceive the world at all, but just images of the objects we understand to constitute it. We have conceptual purchase on the world just because it is our idea, we certainly don't have experiential purchase on any such totality. — Janus
Starts out wrong with non-linguistic states of affairs and goes down hill from there. — Banno
This a "No uninterpreted reality" thingybob? — fdrake
When do people use 'true'?
To add emphasis to a statement of belief. To convey certainty. To convey trust. To add social weight to their opinion. As a stick to beat their opponents... — Isaac
My guess is that Tarski is basing his theory on false premises. For example, the liars paradox.
— Sam26
Odd, since it's clear he explicitly deals with the liar by introducing levels of language. It's certainly not a premise in his argument, obviously. — Banno
I'm asking because there is a substantive body of work, by the strongest logicians of the last hundred years, that depends on t-sentences. It would be odd if that were irrelevant. Worse if they were wrong. — Banno
To me, the simplest way to understand that is that the king is asking, not about Marvin's words, but about what Marvin's words are about — Srap Tasmaner
We don't have models, not in science, not in our heads, only to make predictions about what our models will do, but to make predictions about what what we're modeling will do. — Srap Tasmaner
Suppose I collect marbles in a big jar and have fashioned a clicker so that each time a marble is dropped in the jar a counter advances. I have a very simple model of my marble collection that captures only the total quantity. But it does actually capture that, doesn't it? So long as the clicker is properly designed and works as designed, and there are no confounding factors like a hole in the bottom of the jar, my model faithfully represents my collection with respect to quantity. That it is a model, that it substitutes one medium for another, that it is representational, doesn't automatically mean that words like "truth" and "knowledge" are only expressions of confidence does it? — Srap Tasmaner
So what gets you from, ahem, the model of predictive modeling to everything being a matter of confidence, narrative, and so on? I honestly don't know what you can say here except that it's your knowledge of how our clickers work, and that they're known to be less accurate and less precise than my marble counter. — Srap Tasmaner
What is the content of the belief I hold with a confidence of 0.9? That the marble is, in fact, black. — Srap Tasmaner
I hold that my confidence should be 0.9 because I know, for a fact, how many marbles are black and how many are white. If I don't know that, upon what would I base my partial belief? — Srap Tasmaner
I don't have knowledge but only estimates, those are estimates of how many there actually are, and estimates are better or worse depending on how close they are to being the actual number. — Srap Tasmaner
to make any use of that, he has to know the result of his imaginary experiment. — Srap Tasmaner
proceeding under a policy of assuming it's black will yield fewer surprises. — Isaac
Surely he knows that in doing so he can only be asking Marvin's opinion about the barbarians... which Marvin has already given. — Isaac
adding a word magically causes Marvin to directly relate the actual position of the actual barbarians — Isaac
You base your belief on your priors. So if your prior model had a 90% confidence that working under a policy of assuming the marble is black will yiedl fewest surprises, then, unless updated by some actual surprise, that's the policy you'll proceed under. — Isaac
The constraints the world places on our options are revealed in the surprise (or lack of it) resulting from proceeding under a policy of assuming the world is that way.
One difference here from the direct realist is that the world only constrains our options. Nothing prevents two models from both being good if neither are constrained by the world such as to yield surprising outcomes when followed. — Isaac
Under a policy of assuming what? That it is black. You're saying the same thing I did but in language that sounds more scrupulous. — Srap Tasmaner
FWIW, I had the king asking Jack if what Marvin said was true. I did not have the king thinking that — Srap Tasmaner
...Or is it infinite tower of models? — Srap Tasmaner
I'd really rather argue something else because we still seem to be locked in this bubble of arguing about concepts and assertibility. I'm pretty tired of those kinds of arguments. — Srap Tasmaner
Do you think the world that constrains our models is separable from the measurement apparatus we use to observe it, and the methods of interpreting those measurements, both of which are products of our models? — Joshs
Are cats and mats inside or outside the structures we erect? — Joshs
Can we say, then, that e correctness or incorrectness of ‘the cat is on the mat’ only ever makes sense from within a structure of intelligibility rather than as a comparison of that structure with some constraint wholly outside of it? — Joshs
Something's 'being black' is just saying that we're proceeding under a policy of treating it as black. — Isaac
Or is it infinite tower of models?
— Srap Tasmaner
Yes, basically. — Isaac
Here I think the argument about truth stands only on the basis of what people can possibly be using the word for. — Isaac
If you were sure your jar contained 60 marbles, but your clicker has it at 59 is the model of the jar wrong, or the model of how the clicker works? — Isaac
We can't treat things as black if we don't have the concept of something being black — Srap Tasmaner
The horror! The horror! — Srap Tasmaner
That's a really nice question. I'm trying to avoid knee-jerk responses to it, so no answer yet — Srap Tasmaner
...we never perceive the world at all, but just images of the objects we understand to constitute it... — Janus
our everyday language is insufficient. — Sam26
This approach has the advantage of at least spelling out correspondence, I'd say. The world is, indeed, English-shaped (or concept-shaped, I suspect) so matching is a matter of equality (or perhaps another specifiable relation?) between the concept believed and the world. — Moliere
Then the world is something like a set rather than a place. It's the set of things that are taken to be facts?
The RHS is an element of this set? — Tate
Well said. The subtleties can be finessed.....but generally, well said. — Mww
If that were the case, then there would be no substantive difference between illusions of trees and perception of trees. — creativesoul
Sam, do you think our everyday language is insufficient for explaining the Liar and/or all its permutations? — creativesoul
"If a thing is a 'jabberwocky', you ought throw jelly at it."
Don't you now know how to treat something as a jabberwocky? (Ie throw jelly at it)
At no point in that did you need a concept of what a jabberwocky actually is. — Isaac
A set of behaviours (including mental ones) — Isaac
I think I probably gave mine earlier, but... — Isaac
All our talk is only ever approximation when it is about the world — Janus
Language plays a regulative and limiting role in what can be expressed, and it's also practical and publicly negotiated. It's sort of like a communally constituted, constantly evolving conceptual scheme that 'blocks' intelligible access to a presumably "non-linguistic" shared reality. There's a veil, but it's not a veil of perception on the nature of things, it's a veil shared conduct places on what is intelligible. It smells a lot like transcendental idealism. "There is no uninterpreted reality" is extremely close in spirit to "all experience is governed by a conceptual scheme". There's just one diffuse, distributed, constantly evolving regime of intelligibility which is equivalent to shared patterns of language, and it's linked to the world through truth — fdrake
They're irrelevant to our social uses of propositions as they correspond to facts. We don't need to understand Tarski to understand the relationship between propositions and the world. It would be odd if we did. I can see the attraction to 'p' is true, IFF p, but, again, I don't see a need for it. — Sam26
Why not link the linguistic and the pre or non-linguistic, so that we can say it is not language per se that constrains and limits the intelligibility of the world, but each persons’s integrated history of understanding in general that ‘blocks’ some ways of thinking while enabling others? I would argue that the most important superordinate aspects of our ways of understanding the world, those with the greatest potential to limit what is intelligible to us, is often too murky to be linguistically articulated by us, and yet it drives our greatest hopes and fears. I would also add that our discursive schemes are only partially shared, which means that they are contested between us in each usage. — Joshs
whether we are talking about a scientific measurement using lasers or a measurement using a ruler. — Sam26
Go read "On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme" to find out why not! — fdrake
That's pretty plausible, but I wouldn't presume to say what Davidson has chosen not quite to say. — Srap Tasmaner
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