Doesn’t logic just set out what it is we can say, consistently? — Banno
In particular, what the belief is about is not shown by this analysis... — Banno
That does not strike me as an adequate parsing of what Searle is pointing out. Indeed, it would appear that you are making much the same claim as Searle, the one I expressed as that beliefs range over propositions but that the object of the belief is (usually) not the proposition, but the object of the proposition."X is Y, not Z" — Leontiskos
arithmetic is a consistent discourse that logic cannot fully model or contain. — Leontiskos
That does not strike me as an adequate parsing of what Searle is pointing out. Indeed, it would appear that you are making much the same claim as Searle... — Banno
Gödel showed that for any sufficiently advanced system (roughly, on that includes counting) there are theorems of that logic that cannot be proved within that logic. Note the bolding. The unproven theorems are part of the system. So I'm not sure that "arithmetic is a consistent discourse that logic cannot fully model or contain" is quite right. — Banno
And the mirror analogy just does not seem to work. Of course one can take a mirror and look at it, rather than what it reflects. One does so in order to clean it, or to check it for scratches. So with language, one can look to the logic of propositions in order to understand their structure. — Banno
Could you draw out your claim that we cannot substitute salve veritate using your Superman example? — Leontiskos
If my belief is directed at the world independent of any proposition, then how could I ever be wrong about what I believe? — Leontiskos
Beliefs are stated as an association between an agent and a proposition. This superficial structure serves to show that a belief is always both about a proposition and about some agent. It might be misleading as the proposition is not the object of the belief but constitutes the belief. — Banno
This association is such that if the agent acts in some way then there is a belief and a desire that together are sufficient to explain the agent's action. Banno wants water; he believes he can pour a glass from the tap; so he goes to the tap to pour a glass of water. — Banno
Some folk hereabouts think something like that there are beliefs which are not propositional. It remains unclear to me how that could work. It's supposed that there are hinge beliefs that are in some way not propositional, but that is quite problematic, since hinge beliefs are also supposed to ground other beliefs by implication, and implication relies on propositions. — Banno
Unless your point is that Lois might have inconsistent beliefs? — Banno
It seems worth making the point that parsing natural languages into formal languages is not a game of finding the one, correct, interpretation. Rather one chooses a formalisation that suits one's purpose. — Banno
Or is it better thought of as a sensation, a feeling, an impression, an intuition? — Banno
To my eye this sets out pretty clearly why substitution fails to preserve truth in (2) but not in (3): in (2) it need not be true that Lois believes superman is Kent. — Banno
I must be misunderstanding you, since it seems you are saying that logic is inadequate to the task of dealing with beliefs, when it sets stuff out quite clearly. — Banno
Unless your point is that Lois might have inconsistent beliefs? — Banno
I dunno. Perhaps if we drag this back to your opening post. You proposed that to believe is to think with assent; I guess one might ask: to think what? If what you are thinking cannot be expressed as a proposition, is it a thought? — Banno
It might be misleading as the proposition is not the object of the belief but constitutes the belief. — Banno
The standard way is to post an "intentional object" (in this case a proposition). But then, what's a proposition? The standard "meaning of a sentence" doesn't help much. I believe that Frege thinks it is something like thinking of a state of affairs without affirming or denying it. Are there no other proposals around. — Ludwig V
the object of a belief is not a proposition qua proposition, just as when I look through a mirror to see a reflected object my act of sight does not terminate in the mirror itself. — Leontiskos
the subjective act of belief prescinds from notions of propositionality or representation. — Leontiskos
It is curious, though, that 'belief' insofar as it is distinguished from knowledge really is propositional in the way that Searle is talking about. If I say, "I believe X but I do not know X," then apparently there is an intentional propositionality, and one which is much more common than Searle's example of Bernoulli's principle. — Leontiskos
Sure. It's not a product of such statements. The statement sets out an aspect of the grammar of belief, as between an agent and a proposition.What I do say, is that beliefs are not necessarily a product of statements such as, "X believes that P." — Sam26
I maintain beliefs can be stated.Those are only beliefs that are part of the language of statements. — Sam26
Sure. Beliefs can be shown as well as stated. But they can also be stated. Note also the word "exist' here, and the implicit hypostatisation. When one says that a belief exists, what more is one saying, apart from that thinking the world is such-and-so accounts for this behaviour... the beetle is in this box, but you still cannot see it, yet you can talk of it existing. Nothing is brought into existence here.The fact is that beliefs can exist quite apart from any linguistic expression of that belief. — Sam26
Yes, I understand that you see it this way. But in the end all you have are the actions - both verbal and non-verbal; never the belief. You infer the belief from the act, beetle from the box.so, given my understanding, prior to language there were still beliefs. These beliefs were shown in the actions of those who had the belief. The act is prior to language, then comes language, where we are able to express the belief. In my estimation you and others are putting the cart before the horse. — Sam26
Yep. Stop there.the belief doesn't pop into existence — Sam26
Sure. It's not a product of such statements. The statement sets out an aspect of the grammar of belief, as between an agent and a proposition. — Banno
Note also the word "exist' here, and the implicit hypostatisation. When one says that a belief exists, what more is one saying, apart from that thinking the world is such-and-so accounts for this behaviour... the beetle is in this box, but you still cannot see it, yet you can talk of it existing. Nothing is brought into existence here. — Banno
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