I don't share your allergy to all things mental. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't oppose the mental. I just do not suppose it to be confined to the inside of people's heads. — Banno
I chose the alternate example, whether the fence is wood or brick, as better suited to the task in hand; it's more obviously not just a question of opinion. — Banno
The question was why associating the meaning of the word 'truth' with a pragmatic concept of utility caused this increase in deception. — Isaac
Are people more able to deceive you because they can use the word 'truth' to describe their most pragmatic models. If we banned them from using the word that way, would they somehow be shackled in their deception? — Isaac
I agree, if there wasn't some outward manifestation of the mental, then what would a mental life entail? Even if we exclude language, what's mental would have to seep out in some outward act (linguistic or otherwise). The mental, in order for us to call it mental, has to manifest itself in some way. We could say the same thing for what it means for something to be conscious. — Sam26
it'd be a bloody miracle that any sort of triangulation could happen at all if there wasn't something "truthy" or representative about semantic content, and of necessity that has to be sufficiently shareable to count as such. — fdrake
How many layers of metaphilosophy are we on now? — fdrake
If you want to know what is expressed, look at the behavioural commitments it imbues in someone.
Whether someone needs to actually do a behavioural (including cognitive) commitment of a belief to count as believing that belief (eg, whether the tendency to act as if ever actually needs to be enacted...) seems a different issue; and maybe there's where statements, as a model, come into it. It's a very clear cut case that someone will believe something if they are willing to assert it. — fdrake
In that regard two more definite paths have been fleshed out here, I think, one is the broadly idealist (transcendetal though) Kantian move Isaac makes where it's beliefs all the way down and modelling reality is the same thing as putting a filter on it; everything we know and experience lives on "our side" of the filter. The other is a mirror image; Davidson's actually quite similar to this, only the filter is ever expanding and has a tendency toward monopoly over all expression and interpretation (@Banno), which means there's no point of talking about the other side of the filter, so what's the point in even having a filter as an object? I believe the former finds a lack of access to un-modelled reality a necessary consequence of the existence of a filter due to how interpretation works. The latter finds direct access to modelled reality a necessary consequence of the mutuality of the filter, and thus finds no better account of the filter than the variations of a shared environment. Despite being very opposite positions, both can make the move that any other position is speaking about things which are unintelligible, due to placing different conditions for the possibility of interpretation on the filter! — fdrake
Perhaps some way forward would be to place accuracy, truth, correctness and so on in whatever process generates belief as a mediating factor. For example recognising a falsehood (you then know not-X is true), or learning you are able to pick up something you could not. Neither of those things speak about knowledge being something which lasts, however. — fdrake
You've gone from what ought to be the case, to what is the case. — Isaac
I'm not seeing that. — Banno
What I have in mind is more that the house is a construct of our interaction. — Banno
This is not to say that we do not have a model of the house in terms of some weighting of neural patterns. Perhaps we do; while a very interesting issue in its own right, that is secondary in this context. — Banno
I think Davidson's argument against conceptual schema is in line with the private language argument. After all if there are no private languages there are also no private models. — Banno
It's simply advantageous if your neural-model of the kettle is the same as mine. — Isaac
The point is not that the networks are similar, but that their output - in this case, the behaviour of dealing with kettles - meshes. — Banno
And this fits in with the mention of knowledge, in my reply to Srap Tasmaner, above. You and I both know how to ride a bike, but the proof of this has nothing to do with our having similar neural paths in our brains, and everything to do with not falling off. We also both know that eight is four time two, and again this is to do with our capacity to count eggs and buttons and to share pizza slices and not with our having the same patterns of firing neurones.
Which is not to say that there may not indeed be patterns in that firing. This is the "anomalous" bit in anomalous monism. — Banno
First, we are taught that truthfulness is a good and honourable thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I rather see concepts as post hoc. — Isaac
Music to mine ears. — Banno
In the past I've gone further and argued that concepts are things we do, not mental furniture. — Banno
The Revision theory, discussed in some other posts, appears to offer a way to map out the circularity of the T-sentence definition of Truth. — Banno
... the equivalences of the form 'A' is true if and only if A ... define the conditions under which [my emphasis] a sentence is true.
Well there's our first mistake then. 'Honesty' is the good and honourable thing. 'Truthfulness' is a game used to convince people your beliefs are better than theirs. Often honourable, often not. — Isaac
I don't have any trouble with a neural correlate for beliefs - "tendency to act as if", seems to work. If your neural network has a tendency to act as if X then we can say it has a belief that X. It's a bit of a bastardisation, but I think it's not too unfair to the proper meaning. — Isaac
So, the mental, if prior to its outward expression, cannot be dependent on the outward expression. And this is why the issue is thorny. Being independent from its outward expression, means that there is no necessary relationship between the mental and its outward manifestation. The outward manifestation therefore does not necessarily provide a reliable representation of the mental. That's the problem, and why dishonesty may be allowed to thrive. — Metaphysician Undercover
You and I both know how to ride a bike, but the proof of this has nothing to do with our having similar neural paths in our brains, and everything to do with not falling off. — Banno
I don't see any sense in your proposal, to separate "honest" from "honourable" — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you know the type of dishonesty I'm talking about? If someone shows you a bad habit of yours, which has a bad effect in the work place for example, and you rationalize the bad effect as the result of someone else's actions rather than as the effect of your own bad habit, in an attempt to avoid addressing your own bad habit. — Metaphysician Undercover
The existence of dishonesty demonstrates very conclusively that "the tendency to act as if X", cannot be correlated directly with "has a belief that X". — Metaphysician Undercover
If we look at numerous people who know how to ride a bike, we really cannot make any conclusions about any particular "beliefs" which are involved with this activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, someone like Creative would state that a child will not touch a fire, so this behaviour demonstrates a certain "belief". But this is just a reflection of how we generalize similar behaviours. We observe human beings behaving in similar ways, so we posit a common "belief" which is responsible for such similar behaviour. But that's really just a naive over simplification. — Metaphysician Undercover
it can be true that two people have the same belief, but this does not necessitate that they have the same mental activity associated with that belief. — Metaphysician Undercover
You'll have to just lay out the difference between the two, I'm not sure I'd be using the same distinction as you. — Isaac
I think in philosophy there's simply too little at stake in terms of outcome (allowing any small perceived inconsistency to be exploited), but too much at stake in terms of personal narratives to want to give much leeway. — Isaac
Which of these is the “no models” view?
— Luke
The latter, there's no model in the sense that there's no mediation of contact between word and world via a "conceptual scheme", which is a system of organising experience that is specific to an individual and not parsable in terms of anything communal. I don't think people mean the same thing by "model" in this thread — fdrake
Small-t truth I've been reserving for the truth we attribute to sentences, which is shown by the T-sentence -- the truth predicate can be dropped when using a sentence, and is added to a sentence under consideration. We come to understand small-t truth by learning the language in which said predicate is a part of.
Big-T truth I've been reserving for the substantive theories of truth, or even bigger picture notions that are sometimes equated with Truth -- such as the story of Jesus this thread began with. — Moliere
The only "carrot" in the conversation, as far as I can see, is being able to expand one's own thoughts by hearing others. — Moliere
Where to say "p is true" is simply to assert p? — Isaac
Yes, if they're told well. Philosophical positions are like pieces of music. Worth curating, but you have to be in the right mood to listen to each one. — Isaac
What do you think of the link, if any, to Davidson's rejection of conceptual schema? Davidson's strategy seems to me to be showing that conceptual schema, if they exist, must be private; but that leads to their being incoherent, unintelligible. Hence, he rejects the notion. — Banno
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