There seems to be an equivocation on the word “fact.” — Art48
which contradicts 1.1. — Art48
Does “fact” refer to the state of affairs that my dog has fleas? (i.e., the physical object, dog, has living upon it other physical objects, fleas.) Or does “fact” refer to the true proposition, the true sentence, which states that my dog has fleas? — Art48
So "My dog has fleas" and "the sentence 'my dog had fleas' is true" represent the very same fact."My dog has fleas" is true only if my dog has fleas.
Does “fact” refer to the true proposition, the true sentence, which states that my dog has fleas? Yes. — Banno
W: “1.1 The world is the totality of facts, not of things.” — Art48
“facts” — Art48
Depends on what you mean by "proposition". Propositions can be ink marks on a piece of paper, or vibrating air molecules when speaking.But a material object cannot literally be a part of a proposition and therefore cannot be part of a fact. — Art48
I don't get this distinction between everyday, ordinary usage and some other usage. Usage depends on context. Why should we consider a philosophical context any different than any other context? The idea of ordinary usage takes into account these various contexts. What is ordinary about the usage is that it is ordinary to use the terms that way in those contexts. Any unordinary usage would be a misuse of terms in that context. When we agree on new uses for a term we are essentially creating a new context with which we use the term.In everyday usage, sure. — bongo fury
So that the fact "a is f" is written f(a). — Banno
So that the fact that a is f is written "f(a)". — Banno
, if "my dog has fleas" obtains in the world, then my dog has fleas is a fact. — RussellA
, if it happens in the world that my dog has fleas, then "my dog has fleas" is a fact. — RussellA
, if "my dog has fleas" is a true sentence, then it happens in the world that my dog has fleas. — RussellA
Useful in developing computers, I suppose. — Xtrix
When we agree on new uses for a term we are essentially creating a new context with which we use the term. — Harry Hindu
Weren't Newton & co. rather cheekily re-purposing psychological words like force ("courage, fortitude"), inertia ("unskillfulness, ignorance"), moment ("importance")? — bongo fury
Q: What is meant by “facts”? Isn’t a fact something which is true? And isn’t truth a property of propositions? So, the world consists of all true propositions? If so, then “world” doesn’t refer to the physical universe but to the collection of true propositions about the physical universe. — Art48
Facts are all around us. It's not difficult to find facts. There are many facts that haven't been discovered, but his aim is very specific. — Sam26
Facts are broken down into atomic facts and objects. — Sam26
Language is limited to facts of the world. — schopenhauer1
for Wittgenstein the objects and their associated properties form athought, and hence a picture;fact — Banno
The facts are those propositions which happen to be true. — Banno
No — bongo fury
So facts are not true propositions? — Banno
That "the dog has fleas" is true, is not a fact? — Banno
"Fact" is used variously to refer to true propositions and states of affairs. — Janus
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