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Re: knowledge and belief
- To: John Cowan <cowan@LOCKE.CCIL.ORG>
- Subject: Re: knowledge and belief
- From: Steven Belknap <sbelknap@UIC.EDU>
- Date: Tue, 30 Dec 1997 12:33:19 -0500 (EST)
- In-reply-to: <U16081.820294875@UICVM>
- Reply-to: Steven Belknap <sbelknap@UIC.EDU>
- Sender: Lojban list <LOJBAN@CUVMB.BITNET>
>>This is imperfect in English as
>>the degree is not reducible to a numeric value, but the ordering was
>>absolutely consistent among the three native English speakers who were in
>>my lab. (So this is an ordinal, but not an interval scale.) Interestingly,
>>the one non-native English speaker (native Mandarin speaker) did not agree
>>with this analysis, although his English is quite fluent. He opined that
>>know/believe/think were synonyms!
>>
>A Sapir-Whorf effect??
>
>Robin
No, as the issue was disagreement by the native Chinese speaker regarding
the meaning of English words, rather than a difference in thinking between
the native-Chinese English speaker and American English speakers.
-Steven
Steven Belknap, M.D.
Assistant Professor of Clinical Pharmacology and Medicine
University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria