--- Or Sophie's choice rather.
Suppose that Sophie goes to a brothel (a male brothel). She has to choose the person (male) she finds most attractive, sexually, to have sex with. This is in some exotic country. Sophie is however a bit of a puritan. So for some reason, while she finds A the most sexually attractive, she picks B.
---- I would say that in such a scenario it is difficult to test. I would think that she possibly DOES find B more sexually attractive than A. The very fact that she chose him is all a 'functionalist' cares.
-- There may be less contrived examples.
But in any case, there is a sort of self-defeatist, unverificationist, nature about 'choosing'.
I tend to think that whatever I do, I choose to do. As J notes, "not robbing a bank" is important. A lot of the things we do (or fail to do) is things we choose NOT to do. And we should get a lot of credit for that. They are called omissions. We omit to rob, etc. --
I would like to analyse what actions are "within choice", as it were. A transexual may choose to be a lady (a born male) and succeed, within limits. Or vice versa. So, that's something he (or she) chose.
Liking Mozart is more of a trick. I don't (or rather my mother doesn't) like Mozart. I ask her that she should CHOOSE to like Mozart. She finds the request otiose.
----
Possibly all choices are alternatives. It's always between "A" and "~A". Rather than between A and B and C.
True, in a disjunction, we do get p v q v r ...
But the strict form of a disjunction is
"p v q" -- an alternative.
It may be said that
p v q v r
really stands for
(p v q) v r
----
Grice considers or-thinking at length in Method in philosophical psychology. An eagle lurking as he chooses to kill a rabbit or a mouse is or-thinking. He is about to choose.
----
It is true that the Griceian creature-construction routine SOUNDS behaviouristic, and it may not convince J (who dislikes B. Skinner). But it need not.
---
"decide" and "choose" J prefers to refer to by 'volition'. But I'm not sure.
I would think that the basic block is
--- accepts that ---.
Accepts to have a strong tea, rather than weak tea.
"Weak or strong?"
----
She wills that her tea be strong.
versus she wills that her tea NOT be strong (but weak).
At one point something triggers the 'decision' on her:
"Weak or strong?"
-----
In a way that's a stupid question. "Weak tea" does not really count as 'tea' (but more like a wishy-washy hot liquid) and strong tea can be horrible.
Consider
"Trick or treat?"
Since this is clever, we will simplify that as:
"Trick or not trick?"
----
With that trigger, the agent shows that she wills 'trick'.
Her system created a circumstance such that, one path was 'chosen'. Perhaps she JUST 'said' "trick" without thinking much. A lot of decisions are made on the fact that the formulation is 'tricky' ("Trick or treat?"). A more normal way to ask this, if one thinks of the answers it gets, is "Treat or Trick?".
-----
In fact, it is a conditional:
"If no treat --> trick"
But not that the contraposition does not hold:
"no trick --> no treat"
---
---
Another example of 'choosing' is the marrying ceremony:
"Do you accept this as your man?"
"Yes/No."
----
By uttering Yes, she chooses to become "Mrs. Smith". True, this is loaded in that statistically, "No" answers are not really 'expected'.
----
It's not like she is going to CHOOSE to become Mrs. Smith at THAT time.
----
They say December is the time for choices and resolutions. Usually they should be 10. Ten New Year resolutions for the Grice Club will be issued by Dec. 31.
---- They will be properly formalised in PCI (predicate calculus with identity).
Cheers!
JL
Thursday, August 12, 2010
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