propositional attitudes. facts and states of affairs

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Propositional Attitudes

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Page 1: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Propositional Attitudes

Page 2: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Page 3: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Common Three-Way Equivalence:

Sentence meaningsThe objects of the attitudesThe referents of ‘that’-clauses

Page 4: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Propositional Attitudes

Agent + Attitude + ContentAttitudes = belief, knowledge, desire, hope, etc.The functionalist consensusWhat are the objects of the attitudes (contents)?

Page 5: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Propositional Attitude Ascriptions

Subject + Attitude Verb + ‘that’-ClauseAttitude Verbs = “believe,” “know,” “desire,” “hope,” etc.Attitudes distinct from their ascriptionsContents of ‘that’-clauses objects of attitudes?

Page 6: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Evidence for Equivalence

Anaphora:“Today is Tuesday but John doesn’t know it.”Conjunction Reduction:“It’s true that it’s raining and John believes that it’s raining.”“It’s true that, and John knows that, it’s raining.”

Page 7: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Correspondence Theory

Truth as ‘correspondence with the facts.’Sentences/ statements are true/ falseNo semantically evaluable semantic entitiesObtainingSentences mean facts?

Page 8: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Facts

Objects, properties, and relations“Going together in the world”InstantiationThe Unity of the Fact (problem thereof)

Page 9: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Plato’s Third Man

a is Fa instantiates F-ness<a, F-ness> instantiate instantiation<<a, F-ness>, instantiation> instantiate instantiationetc.

Page 10: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

“We note that when a detective says ‘Let's look at the facts’ he does not crawl round the carpet, but proceeds to utter a string of statements.” (Austin, “Truth”)

Page 11: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

The Multiple Relations Theory

No such thing as false facts.What do we believe when we believe something false?Belief is a relation to “semantically unjoined” objects, properties, and relations.Problem of unity: order.

Page 12: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

States of Affairs

Like facts, but don’t need to actually exist, only possibly exist.

Page 13: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Problems for SofA

Problems for SofA = MeaningsNo impossible states of affairs(“going together” again)Problems for SofA = Objects of AttitudesCoarse-grainedness of SofAProblems for SofA = Referents of ‘That’-ClausesCompositionality

Page 14: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Truth-Evaluable?

Sentences are true vs. sentence meanings are trueWhat I believe is true vs. my belief is true(You can believe what I believe, but you can’t have my belief)“John believes something true” vs. “John’s belief is true.”

Page 15: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Propositionalism

Maintain equivalencePropositions fine-grained, truth-evaluable– more language-likeStill mind-independentA new type of “going together”

Page 16: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Mind-Independence

a proposition (“gedanke”) “is like a planet which, already before anyone has seen it, has been in interaction with other planets.”“when one apprehends or thinks a [proposition] one does not create it but only comes to stand in a certain relation… to what already existed beforehand.”

Page 17: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Ordinary Language Scruples

“I imagined [F: the proposition] that a purple donkey was nibbling on lettuce.”“I was surprised [*the proposition/ F: at the proposition] that John never came to the party.”

Page 18: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

PROPOSITIONS AS SETS OF POSSIBLE WORLDS

Page 19: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Possible Worlds Semantics

Possible worlds: Lewis and StalnakerPossible worlds semantics: Carnap and MontagueAnalysis of necessity and possibilityMeanings as “truth-conditions”Functions from worlds to truth-valuesSets and characteristic functions

Page 20: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Problems

The deduction problemThe “aboutness” problemDirectly referential expressions collapsed into rigid expressions

Page 21: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Even less coarse-grained than SofA: all necessities equivalent, all impossibilities equivalent.Going diagonal (or metalinguistic)Still get all provable truths equivalent, for those who accept the axioms.

Page 22: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Lewis’s Two Gods

“Consider the case of the two gods. They inhabit a certain possible world, and they know exactly which world it is. Therefore they know every proposition that is true at their world. Insofar as knowledge is a propositional attitude, they are omniscient…”

Page 23: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Lewis’s Two Gods

“…Still I can imagine them to suffer ignorance: neither one knows which of the two he is. They are not exactly alike. One lives on top of the tallest mountain and throws down manna; the other lives on top of the coldest mountain and throws down thunderbolts. Neither one knows whether he lives on the tallest mountain or the coldest mountain; nor whether he throws manna or thunderbolts.”

Page 24: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

De Se Exceptionalism

1. The manna god knows exactly which world she inhabits.

2. She does not know that *I am the manna god.*

3. Therefore, *I am the manna god* is not solely about which world she inhabits.

4. Therefore, the de se is special and subject to special semantic treatment.

Page 25: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

STRUCTURED PROPOSITIONS

Page 26: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Structured Propositions

Like SofAs: objects, properties, relationsStructural isomorphism w/ sentencesNew kind of “going together”Limits: articulated non-constituents“John is a tall ballet dancer”Limits: unarticulated constituents

Page 27: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Benefits

Systematicity: if you can think aRb, you can think bRaReverse compositionalityConflating contexts: ‘watch’ + PAST vs. ‘watch’ + PROG + PAST

Page 28: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Grainedness

SPs strictly more fine grained than SofAsSPs determine sets of possible worlds, not vice versa (composition post-linguistic)No logical omniscience, deduction, aboutness problemsToo much grain? A & B vs. B & ANames and natural kind terms, a = b vs. a = a

Page 29: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Problems

Which set-theoretic objects? (order arbitrariness)Why do some set-theoretic objects have truth-conditions and others (regular ones) not?Is the “going together” really not set-theoretic? If not, then what is it?

Page 30: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Overly Linguistic-y?

If propositions have a largely linguistic structure… do they get it from language?If so, are they really mind/ language dependent?If so, did the proposition that dinosaurs exist not exist until we did?And can animals think?

Page 31: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

INTERPRETED LOGICAL FORMS

Page 32: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS
Page 33: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Interpreted Logical Forms

Linguistic syntaxLFs vs. surface structure (not particularly important)Interpreted LFsNo new “going together”

Page 34: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Benefits

Strictly greater grain the SPs(Hence same or worse grainedness problems, same or better benefits)Names and natural kind terms, a = b vs. a = aMeaningful sentences with empty names?Sensible why they have truth-conditions

Page 35: Propositional Attitudes. FACTS AND STATES OF AFFAIRS

Problems

Compositionality?Speakers of different languages no longer expressing the same proposition, believing the same thingsData: “I believed that even when I was a monolingual French speaker!”Attitudes, propositions dependent on languagePierre and “Londres est jolie”