OK I see what you mean, but I would assume that if you press most philosophers on this, they would say something like that is not the "strictly correct" use of the term 'proposition' but only a 'loose' one.As for paraphrase, that's an interesting thing. But I was talking about a step before you really get to content. Something like this: Jones said, last Saturday, "I've got it," referring to the money he owed. You can normalize this to: On July 1, 2017, Jones says that Jones has the money Jones owes. That's a kind of paraphrase, but the goal is just to put the sentence into a particular timeless form and remove a certain amount of context dependence. — Srap Tasmaner
What is a brand such that millions can own the same one? Does it have physical wheels? — Mongrel
I'm unfamiliar with propositions being spoken of as having semantic content. They are semantic content.
You could just say "content" instead of "proposition" and get along just fine. — Mongrel
You have to distinguish between two senses of "the same". On one sense, indeed we don't have the same car (our cars are not numerically or token identical), but on another sense we do - say if our cars are of the same brand and model (they belong to the same type). This distinction should not be very controversial unless you are some sort of extreme nominalist (are you?)I don't think so. You have a car. I have a car. We do not have the same car (type.) We have the same type of transportation. — Mongrel
Semantics is the study of meaning. Propositions are all about meaning. — Mongrel
What was his main concern when he discussed rule following? — Mongrel
Hmm I don't remember ever seeing such a use of 'proposition', can you give an example?Yeah that has to be right. Sometimes "proposition" gets used to mean something like: the sentence under consideration, disambiguated, indexicals eliminated, ellipses eliminated, whatever is needed from context explicitly added in, and so on. A sentence "normalized" in whatever way is needed. That's a useful thing but I don't know a standard term for it. — Srap Tasmaner
Yes, that's what I meant.You utter sentence A. I utter sentence A. We uttered the same sentence. — Mongrel
No, I was argueing the opposite. On the type/token distinction if you say 'cats fly' and I say 'cats fly' then we have uttered the same sentence (type), which is perfectly consistent with saying that sentences are physical entities.If this was a type/token situation, then you uttered your sentence and I uttered mine. We didn't utter the same sentence. Is that what you're arguing? — Mongrel
Semantics is concerned with signs and symbolism. Since nobody claims that abstract propositions have symbolic meaning then they don't have a semantics by definition (it is fine to say that they are identical with semantic content, but it is not the same as saying that they have semantic content - it's a rather pedantic point, but this is what philosophers mean by "semantics", so it is better to follow their use in order to avoid confusion and misunderstanding).A proposition is semantic content. What do you mean they don't have semantics? — Mongrel
I don't know, maybe, but this wasn't his main philosophical concern when he discussed rules.Witt agreed that rule-following is a prominent part of communication, didn't he? — Mongrel
You are talking here about the distinction between sentence token and sentence type, and I don't see why this should contradict what I said (that they are physical entities). We can after all talk about physical entities as particulars (a cloud) or as being a type/kind to which particulars belong ("being a cloud"). If your argument were right then it would prove that physical objects don't exist...Whatever it is, it's not physical sounds or marks. You should be able to get that intuitionally by noticing that you and I can utter the same sentence. Two utterances (physical sounds or marks), one sentence.
There's an argument that buttons it up tight if your intuition fails you :) A sentence is a particular pattern of words. — Mongrel
What I wanted to say is that this is not the same as saying that propositions have a semantics like sentences.Definitely. So? — Mongrel
Witt' would definitely disagree with Fodor more or less on everything... And I don't agree at all that Witt' was "laying out rules" (whatever that means).If he's laying out rules, then he's not saying something Witt would disagree with, is he? — Mongrel
Then what else could it be...?A sentence isn't a physical sign. — Mongrel
Fine, but this is not the same as saying that they have a semantics like sentences.A proposition is semantic content. — Mongrel
Obviously yes, his whole Language of Thought theory is about syntax.Isn't Fodor talking about rules? — Mongrel
Putting aside for a moment which philosophers believe that, here you are explicitly using sentences as truth-bearers instead of propositions. Why are you making that choice? — Mongrel
That's contrary to common sense, so the philosophers who adhere to that view have some explaining to do. You wouldn't say the majority of philosophers have made this blunder would you? — Mongrel
the difference between ‘good book’, ‘good rest’ and ‘good fight’ is probably not meaning shift but syncategorematicity. ‘Good NP’ means something like NP that answers to the relevant interest in NPs: a good book is one that answers to our interest in books (viz. it’s good to read); a good rest is one that answers to our interest in rests (viz. it leaves one refreshed); a good fight is one that answers to our interest in fights (viz. it’s fun to watch or to be in, or it clears the air); and so on. It’s because the meaning of ‘good’ is syncategorematic and has a variable in it for relevant interests, that you can know that a good flurg is a flurg that answers to the relevant interest in flurgs without knowing what flurgs are or what the relevant interest in flurgs is.
truth is attributed to the meaning of the statement, it is not attributed to the physical words themselves. The meaning must be interpreted before truth can be attributed, and this interpretation is subjective. So truth is attributed to the interpretation, and any interpretation is subjective. It is not the act of attribution which I am claiming is subjective, but the thing, the interpretation, which truth is being attributed to, which I am claiming is subjective. — Metaphysician Undercover
But there's no such thing as a theory of types, and there could be no "syntax errors" in a language (because every sentence in language can be potentially made sense of with the right interpretation).If one of the standard ways of constraining higher-order logic to retain consistency (eg Russell's theory of Types), is invoked, the paradox disappears because some of the statements in the attempted proof cannot be made - they are syntax errors. — andrewk
Yes, but this is not a 'metaphysical' explanation of truth. When you say that proposition P is true iff such and such is the case, then you simply repeat P, and this really doesn't explain why P is true, in the sense in which the correspondence theorist attempts to explain it. He thinks that the thing that we have to mention in the right hand side of "P is true iff X" must be (in some sense) something different from P, but the trouble is (as Ramsey's argument and others show) that if we don't mention P itself in right hand side, then whatever you put there wouldn't explain the truth of P (since it is something different); but if we do mention P then the theory becomes trivial and uninformative. This I think shows that we should abandon all metaphysical ambitions to 'explain' truth (i.e., postulating entities that 'correspond' to sentence and so on).We do want to preserve the intuition that a proposition is true if things are the way it says they are, don't we? — Srap Tasmaner
You don't really need counterfactuals or statements about the past to demonstrate that the correspondence theory doesn't work (there's a lot of philosophical controversy surrounding them). Just take the simpler case of negative facts (that is, negated propositions that are true). It is a true statement that Bernie Sanders is not the the president of the US, what is the 'corresponding' thing or the entity that makes it true? It is certainly not the existence of Bernie himself with the negation sign attached to him. Or what about the fact that Barack Obama is not (the current) president of the US? Nothing in the world corresponds to either of these statements yet they are true and have furthermore different truth conditions.And what about statements about the past or the future? Can they be true (and so correspond to facts)? If so, then what is a fact? Obviously it can't (always, at least) just be some physical state of affairs, as there is no physical state of affairs which corresponds to the true claim "there was a battle at Hastings in 1066" or to the true claim "the Sun will rise tomorrow". — Michael
How have you experienced every person on the world has a unique DNA fingerprint other than reading that to be the case by in a science journal or something like that? A lot of our knowledge is from reading books or watching documentaries, not by direct experience. Is what we read more wrong than what we subjectively experience and take as truth? — Harry Hindu
Well no, the meaning of the sentence is not a picture - the sentence says that Bernie Sanders is the president (not that his picture exists), and this is what it means. Your view that all false sentences are meaningless is really just incredible. It follows that whenever you understand a sentence then you can know apriori that it is true (so I know what the sentence "I'm a millionaire" means therefore it is a proof that I am a millionaire etc.).Sure, if the meaning of your words is to make me picture Bernie Sanders in the White House, even though he isn't. Your words refer to the image of Bernie being President. — Harry Hindu
Synonymy is not sameness of meaning on a view that has meaning as synonymous with causality.
My view isn't that meaning is synonymous with causality. (I explained that at the start of this subdiscussion.) — Terrapin Station
Again, if 'they' are indeed identical then there are not two things here, so there's nothing about which you can affirm what you try to affirm, and so this sentence is just nonsense and not an expression of a fact or a view that someone can agree or disagree about (and equally saying that they are not identical is nonsense).And you can have a view that A and B are identical as well as a view that they are not. — Terrapin Station
This example doesn't help you because the expressions 'Jones' and 'The man we saw from a distance in the train station' are not synonymous, and stating an identity relation between them is not a matter of stipulation, like in the case where you define the word 'meaning' via causality. So there is indeeda sense in which we are talking about two things in your Jones case, even if the identity statement is true (and I maintain that 'identity' in this example is not used the same way as an identity in the original case that we were discussing).If "The man we saw from a distance in the train station" is identical to "Jones" then indeed, we're not talking about two things, just one. Otherwise we're talking about two things. — Terrapin Station
He need not to be a witness to the crime, but he must know that a general rule of the form "if such and such evidence exist in the crime scene then probably a crime of type x took place" is true, and my point is that this principle is something that you do need experience to know it's truth.Wrong. We establish causal relations all the time that we never experience, and we make good predictions from this knowledge often. What does a crime scene investigator do if not creating an explanation of causes of the effects of the crime scene - all without having been an eye-witness to the crime itself? This fingerprint along with this DNA means that this person was at the crime scene when it happened. — Harry Hindu
But it is meaningful. (I rest my case)How is "Bernie Sanders is the president of the united states" meaningful, or useful? — Harry Hindu
But you said earlier that synonymy is not sameness of meaning, so you can't appeal to semantics here.That's certainly the case logically once one realizes the identity (or assumes it for the sake of argument or understanding the view). But they're not the same semantically, especially if one has never considered the identity. — Terrapin Station
If A and B are identical, it means that there is only one thing and not two - so there is no 'it' that you can ask about whether it is identical or not, and so there's nothing to affirm or deny.Sure it is. That A and B are identical is a view, just like that they're not is a view. — Terrapin Station
There's a thing called 'the principle of charity', which says that you ought to try interpret other people's words in the most plausible or charitable way that you possibly can, before you jump to the conclusion that they must be saying something totally absurd or plainly false (even if they do sometimes say such things).I think it's amusing that if what was meant was that meaning was synonymous with causality (more or less), that you're misunderstanding of that is something you'd parse as the other guys' fault, because he's supposed to cater to what you want him to be doing. Hahaha. — Terrapin Station
It doesn't matter if this is not the same sign in this context. If "A=B" means something like "whenever the sign 'A' occurs you can interchange it with the sign 'B'", then "A=B" becomes equivalent to to saying that "A=A".Right. But in a case like this, it's not the same sign, — Terrapin Station
It's not a 'view' about anything, it's just an arbitrary stipulation which doesn't achieve anything.and you certainly hadn't considered the view of meaning being synonymous with causality before. — Terrapin Station
Which is precisely what I said...Your views will evolve simply by going through the process of trying to explain them to others, by the way. — Terrapin Station
Because no one is infallible, and you can learn a great deal by talking and trying to persuade other people. Unless of course you assume in advance that you must be right about everything.Right, so it's a trivial thing and it doesn't prove anything. Well, so what? Why would you be taking anyone to be trying to prove anything anyway? — Terrapin Station
A=A is not a correct analysis of A, because it is not an analysis of anything, but a pointless repetition of the same sign.Well, they'd be offering an analysis of the thing per what's correct about it in their view, and cutting off the stuff they think is incorrect. — Terrapin Station