14292
|
Dispositions seem more ethereal than behaviour; a non-occult account of them would be nice [Goodman]
|
|
Full Idea:
Dispositions of a thing are as important to us as overt behaviour, but they strike us by comparison as rather ethereal. So we are moved to enquire whether we can bring them down to earth, and explain disposition terms without reference to occult powers.
|
|
From:
Nelson Goodman (Fact, Fiction and Forecast (4th ed) [1954], II.3)
|
|
A reaction:
Mumford quotes this at the start of his book on dispositions, as his agenda. I suspect that the 'occult' aspect crept in because dispositions were based on powers, and the dominant view was that these were the immediate work of God.
|
18749
|
Goodman argued that the confirmation relation can never be formalised [Goodman, by Horsten/Pettigrew]
|
|
Full Idea:
Goodman constructed arguments that purported to show that a satisfactory syntactic analysis of the confirmation relation can never be found. In response, philosophers of science tried to model it in probabilistic terms.
|
|
From:
report of Nelson Goodman (Fact, Fiction and Forecast (4th ed) [1954]) by Horsten,L/Pettigrew,R - Mathematical Methods in Philosophy 4
|
|
A reaction:
I take this idea to say that Bayesianism was developed in response to the grue problem. This is an interesting light on 'grue', which never bothered me much. The point is it scuppered formal attempts to model induction.
|
16391
|
Indexical thoughts are about themselves, and ascribe properties to themselves [Perry, by Recanati]
|
|
Full Idea:
Perry's newer token-reflexive framework says indexical thoughts have token-reflexive content, that is, thoughts that are about themselves and ascribe properties to themselves. …They relate not to the subject, but to the occurrence of a thought.
|
|
From:
report of John Perry (Reference and Reflexivity [2001]) by François Recanati - Mental Files 18.1
|
|
A reaction:
[There seem to be four indexical theories: this one, Recanati's, the earlier Kaplan-Perry one, and Lewis's] Is Perry thinking of second-level thoughts? 'I'm bored' has the content 'boredom' plus 'felt in here'? How does 'I'm bored' refer to 'I'm bored'?
|
4794
|
We don't use laws to make predictions, we call things laws if we make predictions with them [Goodman]
|
|
Full Idea:
Rather than a sentence being used for prediction because it is a law, it is called a law because it is used for prediction.
|
|
From:
Nelson Goodman (Fact, Fiction and Forecast (4th ed) [1954], p.21), quoted by Stathis Psillos - Causation and Explanation §5.4
|
|
A reaction:
This smacks of dodgy pragmatism, and sounds deeply wrong. The perception of a law has to be prior to making the prediction. Why do we make the prediction, if we haven't spotted a law. Goodman is mesmerised by language instead of reality.
|