Of course believers would not admit to the 'utility' argument, anymore than a naive realist would admit it equally applying to 'the existence of trees' ( or 'rocks', or any other 'thing')!
From a philosophical pov, the term 'naive realist' neatly avoids 'confusion'. — fresco
At the risk of extending this discussion far beyond its original bounds, given (among many other things) the on-going history of most major religions to impose their belief systems on non-believers, I do not consider these situations to be ephemeral; they are essential components of many of mankind's past & current conflicts.The OLP situations I raise are ephemeral context bound episodes.
The post structuralist view recognizes that transience and seeks to generalize about them. — fresco
But if a relative view is taken, we can validly say 'God exists for believers' because the concept has utility for their interactions..And 'God does not exist for atheists' because the reverse is true. The consequences (i.e.what matters) of this relativity view are that atheists' seeking to argue against 'God's existence' on the basis of 'evidence' are barking up the wrong tree. — fresco
Could/would you please re-phrase that answer in plain language? Thanks.Its not a question of 'belief'. Its a fundamental later phenomenological pov which follows Kant's non accessibility of noumena and therefore discards 'noumena' as vacuous, and which accepts Nietsche's rejection of any difference between 'description' and 'reality'. It is also supported by Maturana's argument that all we call 'observation' essentially involves 'languaging'. — fresco
There is no one universal order that underlies all language. — Fooloso4
Are you seeing that as controversial? If x is a state of affairs, then x isn't impossible. That seems fairly obvious, no? — Terrapin Station
Sure, but then what we're describing isn't actually a state of affairs — Terrapin Station
I think if a state of affairs can be described as impossible then it can be described as false. Either way your describing something that isn’t true. — AJJ
Basically states of affairs are relations of existent things, as well as properties of existent things. Things exist, they have properties, and they are situated in certain (dynamic) ways with respect to other existent things. Those are states of affairs. — Terrapin Station
If the cat is not sitting on the mat then it’s false that the cat is sitting on the mat. — AJJ
The “something” there is the state of affairs of the cat sitting on the mat. — AJJ
Substitute the word “reality” for “Truth” if you like. In that case something that is false would be so because it is not part of “reality”. But “reality” there just refers to the objective Truth. — AJJ
Can a thing be false and thus part of the capital F False? — EricH
No - it just wouldn’t be part of the Truth. — AJJ
Things that are true are part of the Truth, not the other way around. — AJJ
My view is that statements and propositions are true when they correspond to things that are capital T True. — AJJ
