1 upvotes, 1 direct replies (showing 1)
View submission: Why treat "desire" as a propositional attitude?
Here's a quote: "The confusion is generated by the tacit assumption that what is believed is some thing. It is correct, and unproblematic, that when one believes truly that things are so and when one believes falsely that things are so, one has the very same belief. It is also true that when one believes truly that things are so, then what one believes is what is the case. But what one believes is not the same as what is the case, any more than when one does what one is told to do, one does the same as one is told to do. Of course, when one believes truly that things are so, the question ��What do you believe?’ and the question ‘What is the case?’ both receive the same answer. It is a remarkable fact that we can be so misled by ‘whats’ and ‘sames’, and by wrongly taking ‘what’ to be a relative, rather than an interrogative, pronoun here."
Comment by drinka40tonight at 10/02/2017 at 15:56 UTC
1 upvotes, 1 direct replies
Huh. It sounds real interesting, but, to be honest, I almost can't make heads or tails of that. I now have to read the chapter!