Believing is an action that occurs in grades, so a binary criteria is not an adequate system
It is certainly possible to construct or entertain simultaneously multiple propositions that are in logical conflict, say for example (I'll be using phenomena in language to exemplify my arguments):
P1: Animals exist
Both of these cannot be true, because one is a negation of the other.P2: Animals do not exist
Interestingly enough, I think our ability to do this at least shows that what we are able to speak is not bounded to only truthful propositions (perhaps this is not the same state of affairs for animal communication) and also that we can articulate a proposition without asserting its truth. The fact that P and its negation could even be articulated, and furthermore that it is totally comprehensible, maybe be more an indication of the mechanical qualities of our language faculty (though what sort of linguistic/mathematical/logical qualities would be indicated I would not know), say for example that syntactically permissible sentences can be articulated independently of their whether or not they are true. Adding to this example, a further observed quality, is nicely suggested by the well known instance of a syntactically permissible sentence that has no meaningful interpretation (ie it is incomprehensible):
So we should assume that grammaticality in general is not a criteria employed in assessing truthfulness. Nor in the general case does a grammatical consideration make it any more feasible to derive meaning from a sentence."Colorless green ideas sleep furiously" Chomsky [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorless_green_ideas_sleep_furiously]
With these ideas in mind, I think the sole agent responsible for our ability to form P1 and P2 may in principle be merely the syntactic flexibility of our language operating outside of the bounds of truth or comprehensibility. This is certainly a very mechanical aspect of language.
Having a plausible explanation for why we might be able to form grammatical and comprehensible propositions like P1 and P2 in the first place that conflict in logical terms we should now formulate a working definition of "believing". Let us assume belief to be a psychological state of mind and articulate its relation to the objective truth-hood of those entities that are the objects of believe. I need to propose the objectivity of truth values here, even though there may not be such a thing. Whether there is true objectivity, or what that even means, is not my concern here, so just think of this post more or less as an exploration of implications resulting from assuming there is objectivity in the truth or falsity of propositions. So that whether a given proposition is true or false is always predetermined independently of anyone individuals state of mind and specifically that truth-hood is not determined by unanimous agreement from collected individuals.
Taking the Wikipedia definition as a starting point:
- [li]Belief is the psychological state in which an individual holds a proposition or premise to be true.[/li]
With this definition, what an individual believes in is limited to what that individual holds as true. If a proposition is objectively true and an individual believes to be true, then everything seems consistently in accord with our definitions and assumptions. What needs explaining is the possibility of a situation where a proposition is objectively true but an individual believes it to be false (or vice-versa).
For the affirmative side of the argument (i.e. an individual can believe in a contradiction) let's make an expansion on that definition and assume that an individual can "belief" in false propositions, keeping in mind that we have objective and predetermined truth-values, so that consequently a system of "beliefs" is not defined as those propositions which are held to be true in the mind of an individual, but that the believed in propositions that an individual holds can include false ones as well. In this sense, our usage of the term "believing" is just being taken as synonymous with "holding" (as a cognitive action), and now the term "holding" has the burden of definition. Well at some eventual point of inquiry we will have no option but to invoke some set of axioms, ill stop the potential infinite regress now by taking the meaning of the term "holding" in a cognitive sense as axiomatic, and I will appeal to the reader?s intuition for justification. Although this discussion may be irrevocably hampered by not explicating what is meant by "holding" something in the mind, I still think we can get some interesting ideas out by moving on from this.
All this would certainly be at odds to Aristotle's way of thinking:
"One cannot say of something that it is and that it is not in the same respect and at the same time."
But in asserting a cognitive ability to hold both true and false propositions, how are we now to go about in trying to empirically refute or validate this? Could we draw efficacious data from social sciences, economics, or religion? I don't know. This is why I started this thread.
The negative side of the argument (i.e. an individual can't believe in a contradiction) seems to be merely an acceptance of Wikipedia's definition that the only propositions held in the mind are the truthful ones. This would be nice if it were readily the case, but remember that our language (which is an invention of the mind) is powerful enough to grant us with the ability to articulate in a grammatical way, and further to comprehend to an extent, propositions which are objective contradictions (at least by assumption of objectivity). Well grammar is a process in the mind and so somewhere in the mind is an agent which has generated a contradiction and in some realm of the mind this contradiction has a seat. If we are to functionally segregate the language faculty from the faculty of the mind that is responsible for beliefs and believing, this would yield an easy explanation by then saying that language can operate outside of an individual's held beliefs. In other words we are capable of articulating false propositions but not believing in them because not all language related events in the mind are codependent on the beliefs of the individual.
Well it's mid afternoon, so I have to get drunk and go visit the bank now. Post your thoughts.