First of all, I would like to thank you again for your comment.
They are propositions. Propositions are either true or false. Ideas can be building block of propositions. — Corvus
What does Hume do? He says, "This statement is true because I have seen it and it can be verified."
Ideas are mental image. On their own it has no true or false values. As Hume wrote, ideas can be vivid or faint, strong or weak depending on the type of perception — Corvus
Hume would say that by introducing Level 2, I've simply renamed "strong desire" or "hallucination" a "Deductive Construct." If anyone can declare any fantasy a "Level 2 Law," then my model ceases to be analytical and becomes justificatory.
I don't dispute any of this. In fact, in the starting thread, I even call deductive constructs speculations elevated by an act of will to the level of constitutive law.
At the same time, I also make it clear from the very beginning and in subsequent posts that my model isn't about what is considered true and what is false. Rather, it's about what a person considers true and what is false.
Let's return to the guitar example. I'll rephrase it slightly for ease of use and clarity. If you insist, we'll return to your version of the judgments; it'll just be a bit longer.
So, you go to the store and see a guitar. You make two empirical judgments:
1. This guitar is good
2. This guitar is expensive
To be honest, neither of these judgments are purely empirical. They are evaluative. In the first case, you compared the quality of this guitar with others; in the second case, you compared the price of the guitar with others plus your wallet.
So what decision will you make? Buy or not buy? Hume would answer: it's not reliably known. Because it's not empirically verifiable. And it will only become known after you buy or don't buy.
Now let's return to my model. It doesn't establish the truth, but it can help predict behavior. The statements about the guitar in question, according to my approach, are Level 3—empirical. By themselves, they don't regulate anything. But my behavior will be regulated by the Level 2 ideas that prompted me to go to the store. This could be anything, for example:
1. I'm a brilliant guitarist, and my brilliant playing requires a great instrument.
or
2. I'm an amateur who plays for my family on weekends.
Both of these supra-statements are unverifiable; they're my fantasies, but I've accepted them as Level 2. So, when I'm in the store, I'll take empirical statements and compare them with my Level 2 ideas.
Empirical evidence won't motivate me. But my chimeras (which may or may not be true) will!
Moreover, if the Level 2 idea turns out to be a hoax, the guitarist will simply have wasted a ton of money. But reality can also change, and the guitarist will change it thanks to this guitar and his persistence – he will truly become an extraordinary musician. Currently, in the further development of my model, I'm describing how this happens. I'm describing the dynamics of ideas, adding regulators such as "ontological debt," which I wouldn't like to describe here. The model, as presented, has predictive power: will your Level 2 ideas withstand the impact of reality?
Bottom line: Empiricism is good, I'm not abolishing it. But empiricism doesn't move the world. But our chimeras—false or not—do. That's what this whole model is about.
This is where the concept of "idea weight" comes in. At first glance, an "idea" is purely mental and physically incapable of having weight or mass. However, it weighs heavily on reality. A person convinces themselves they're an outstanding guitarist, then goes and buys a real, expensive guitar. Marketers will take stock at the end of the year and say, for example, that few expensive guitars were sold this year. New ways to position the product and manipulate minds must be devised to increase sales. Then, a clever marketer will come up with an advertising concept (which is essentially a brainwashing technique) and create contextual advertising about some success story about a boy who dreamed of becoming a guitarist but later became a great musician and owns an expensive guitar.
Thus, well-crafted and delivered content will encourage more customers to visit the store. What marketers are doing in this case is constructing reality. They aren't exploring the truth, but rather motivating action. The recipient of the advertisement finds themselves defenseless in this situation. After all, they're being sold not the truth, but an idea.
The proposed model can help assess whether I really want what I want, or am I being fooled?
This example is also consistent with other cases where people are brainwashed not just by the fake value of a product, but by the fake value of "Values."