Rich
Shawn
My point is that the answer to the question in the OP is that the question itself is grammatically erroneous; with the corollary that facts are not the sort of thing that can be true or false. — Banno
Janus
unenlightened
Rich
Terrapin Station
So you are claiming that all philosophers use the word in the same way? — Banno
Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
I think it is generally understood to be distinct from ontology — John
unenlightened
Just want to know who decides? Who is nominated to decide what is a fact based upon their observations? And how is this communicated? Very fundamental. Very simple. — Rich
Banno
"standard usage" — Terrapin Station
Rich
Banno
Then it is pretty much what I described originally. A belief which a certain population agrees upon as being a fact. The population can be one, two, or more. Problems arise when two populations disagree upon what was thought to be facts. The attribute "fact" is just signed to this belief to give it more weight. Rather than say: "I believe" it is said "It is a fact", followed, of course, but the discussion where the are disagreements. Every discipline had facts that are in constant dispute. It fills libraries. — Rich
Rich
Rich
Wosret
Wayfarer
Is it a fact that 2+2=4? — Question
Rich
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