The idea is something like that we sometimes both use and mention; SO "Galileo said that the Earth moves" might be analysed as a conjunct of "The Earth moves" and "Galileo said that", where the demonstrative "that" points to "The Earth moves", or even to Galileo's utterance of "The Earth moves". — Banno
Around and around. Seems to me you talk as if the belief is something more than the behaviour, existing beyond that, until I push the point, then you agree with me that it isn't. — Banno
The scope of the belief statements surely makes explicit your quibble? — Banno
And the quote form Searle seems to me to be making that point; that B(L,p) is somewhat inadequate, and that the belief is about the individual named "a" — 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
So I think you are saying that "I believe X but I do not know X" expresses a view about the certainty of, or evidence for, X - that certainty is less than complete, or that evidence is less than conclusive.
Is that something like what you meant? — Ludwig V
To say that B(L,p) is inadequate is to say that there is some essence of belief that it misconstrues. Would you agree? — Leontiskos
No. Adding essence here doesn't make things clearer. It's just that there is an aspect that is shown better by other analysis. — Banno
It is impossible to exaggerate the damage done to philosophy and cognitive science by the mistaken view that "believe" and other intentional verbs name relations between believers and propositions. — Searle, my bolding
If there is no essence, then what does it show better? — Leontiskos
It is legitimate to describe what belief does as a way of understanding what belief is. To describe an effect is not to describe the cause. That's the problem: ↪Sam26 says "beliefs are..." What he ought to say is, "the effects of beliefs are..." He is not talking about beliefs; he is talking about their effects. — Leontiskos
To "It is impossible to exaggerate the damage done to philosophy and cognitive science by the mistaken view that "believe" and other intentional verbs name relations between believers and propositions" I might append "...in that they find themselves searching for that relation as if it were a thing in the mind, or worse, in the brain". — Banno
The nature of belief... — Banno
Aristotle's essentialism has little in common with its modern homonym. Aristotelian essences are what John Locke called 'real' essences: the essence of a kind K is that characteristic, or set of characteristics, of members of K upon which any other properties they have as members of K depend. That there are essences of this sort is at worst a trivial truth (if all the properties of K turn out to be essential), and at best a plausible formulation of one of the fundamental assumptions of some branches of scientific inquiry: one of the things a chemist does when he investigates the nature of a stuff is to seek an explanation of its superficial properties and powers in terms of some underlying structure; one aim of the psychologist is to explain overt behaviour by means of covert states or dispositions. There is nothing archaic or 'metaphysical' about the doctrine of real essences: that doctrine merely supposes that among the properties of substances and stuffs some are explanatorily basic, others explanatorily derivative. I do not deny that there are difficulties with such a doctrine (it must at least answer the old rumblings of Locke); but I leave the reader to form his own opinion of their relevance and cogency. — Introduction to Posterior Analytics, by Jonathan Barnes, p. xiii
For example, we can conclude as Mary sits in a chair that she believes there is a chair available to sit in. So the meaning of the concept belief is tied to the various uses of the word in our everyday language. — Sam26
But your analysis betrays you. You are inferring a cause (<Mary believes there is a chair available to sit in>) from an effect (<Mary sits in a chair>). The belief is not the effect, and our everyday language reflects this. If someone asks you, "Do you know any of Mary's beliefs?," you would not say, "Yes, one of Mary's beliefs is sitting in a chair." According to everyday language this response wouldn't make any sense. A belief can be inferred from an action, but a belief is not an action. A belief is a state of mind, or as Searle says, an intentional state.
You want to focus on this relation between beliefs and actions, but it seems that in the process you have actually conflated beliefs and actions. — Leontiskos
I would say that the action or act of sitting in a chair shows Mary's belief... — Sam26
Again, so the ontology of belief refers to those things minds do in the world that can be said to be beliefs. — Sam26
However, I would go further, viz., beliefs are relations between individuals and certain types of actions. — Sam26
We know [a belief is not its effect] because one belief can cause multiple effects, and therefore a belief and its effect are not the same thing (even when it comes to thinking). — Leontiskos
the essence of a kind K is that characteristic, or set of characteristics, of members of K upon which any other properties they have as members of K depend. — Introduction to Posterior Analytics, by Jonathan Barnes, p. xiii
I don't see this approach as being of help here. It's a quagmire. — Banno
I don't see this approach as being of help here. It's a quagmire. — Banno
What is the proof that the possible practical consequences of a concept constitute the sum total of the concept? The argument upon which I rested the maxim in my original paper was that belief consists mainly in being deliberately prepared to adopt the formula believed in as the guide to action.
If this be in truth the nature of belief, then undoubtedly the proposition believed in can itself be nothing but a maxim of conduct. That, I believe, is quite evident.
But how do we know that belief is nothing but the deliberate preparedness to act according to the formula believed?. . . — Charles Sanders Peirce, The Maxim of Pragmatism
That was an interesting and clarifying post. — Leontiskos
It seems to me that those who attempt to reject the old-school Aristotelian approach are often already presupposing the very things they putatively reject, only without realizing it. — Leontiskos
looks to presuppose essence. You seem to be making use of some as yet unstated transcendental argument, along the lines of the only way one account is better than another is if it is closer to the essence...If Searle says, "A is a better X than B,"* then he is already committed to the entailment that there is some essence of X that can be approximated with more or less success. — Leontiskos
You seem to be making use of some as yet unstated transcendental argument, along the lines of the only way one account is better than another is if it is closer to the essence... — Banno
But I will not pursue that here, not unless you are able to set out with much greater detail what sort of thing an essence might be. — Banno
It is impossible to exaggerate the damage done to philosophy and cognitive science by the mistaken view that "believe" and other intentional verbs name relations between believers and propositions. — Searle, my bolding
The basic idea is that there is a real essence, defined by a real definition, and the real definition is approximated by a nominal definition. So when someone says, "A is a better (definition) of X than B," they must be approximating some real essence with their nominal definition, A. — Leontiskos
To "It is impossible to exaggerate the damage done to philosophy and cognitive science by the mistaken view that "believe" and other intentional verbs name relations between believers and propositions" I might append "...in that they find themselves searching for that relation as if it were a thing in the mind, or worse, in the brain". — Banno
I'm contemplating a thread about Davidson's project. It would be a long one. — Banno
I don't see how you could maintain a differentiation between real and nominal definitions. Seems to me that all definitions are nominal; that is what definitions do. — Banno
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