Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Quine, W. V. and Ullian, J. S. (1978-02-01), The Web of Belief, McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages, Retrieved on 2013-11-15
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  • Folksonomies: bias belief cognitive bias

    Memes

    15 NOV 2013

     Beliefs are Like the Charge in a Battery

    Inculcating a belief is like charging a battery. The battery is thenceforward disposed to give a spark or shock, when suitably approached, as long as the charge lasts; similarly the believer is disposed to respond in characteristic ways, when suitably approached, as long as the belief lasts. The belief, like the charge, may last long or briefly. Some beliefs, like the one about Hannibal, we shall probably retain while we live. Some, like our belief in the dependability of our neighborhood cob...
    Folksonomies: belief reinforcement
    Folksonomies: belief reinforcement
      1  notes

    Some reinforce with use (charging), while others vanish from the mind because they do not recharge.

    15 NOV 2013

     Observations are Grounded in Language

    What are observations? Some philosophers have taken them to be sensory events: the occurrence of smells, feels, noises, color patches. This way lies frustration. What we ordinarily notice and testify to are rather the objects and events out in the world. It is to these that our very language is geared, because language is a social institution, learned from other people who share the scene to which the words refer. Observation sentences, like theoretical sentences, are for the most part senten...
      1  notes

    Not senses.

    15 NOV 2013

     The World is a Black Box

    The world with its quarks and chromosomes, its distant lands and spiral nebulae, is like a vast computer in a black box, forever sealed except for its input and output registers. These we directly observe, and in the light of them we speculate on the structure of the machine, the universe. Thus it is that we think up the quarks and chromosomes, the distant lands and the nebulae; they would account for the observable data. When an observation turns out unexpectedly, we may try modifying our th...
     1  1  notes

    We don't know how it works, we only see the inputs and outputs and must extrapolate hypotheses from what we see.

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