Dear all,

A reminder that there is a bonus HPS Philosophy Workshop tomorrow, where Jack 
Marley-Payne (MIT) will be presenting his work on ‘Task-Indexed Belief’.

We’ll be meeting in Seminar Room 2 of the HPS Department on Free School Lane, 
at the usual time of 12 noon.

===

ABSTRACT

Belief is traditionally thought of as a two-place relation between a subject 
and a proposition. I want to argue that this is mistaken. Roughly put, belief 
should be indexed to relevant tasks the subject might engage in. This is 
required to give an adequate account of cases of conflicting behaviour - for 
example, implicit bias. No simple yes/no answer to the question ‘does S believe 
that p’ is acceptable in these cases – instead one needs to say ‘S believes 
that p relative to one index but doesn’t relative to another’. I'll argue for 
this claim by looking at a number of examples that show that our functional 
structure is more complex that is often assumed. Usually, philosophers restrict 
their attention to cases in which verbal and non-verbal behaviour conflict; but 
there are many other ways it can come apart. For this reason, a correspondingly 
complex notion of belief is required.

===

Come along if you’d like to give Jack some constructive feedback on his paper.

Hope to see you all tomorrow!

Toby Bryant
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