"Science" is an abstraction. Right?
It's people who pursue truths. Scientific or otherwise. Right? — wonderer1
Reliability isn't the only relevant quality but forgetting that, conceptually, truth should be reliable, but in practice, it depends on the truth conditions. — Judaka
Within your argument, you use words such as "surprise" and "convincing", which are inherently unscientific. You can't measure the "convincingness" of an argument, right? If I find your argument convincing, that's no guarantee that someone else will. You could make the same argument with "reliability" itself. — Judaka
The quality of truth is dependent upon the truth conditions. Truths can have various truth conditions and have various qualities, right? — Judaka
Yes, I intentionally used "unscientific" terms because they should apply to all kinds of contexts.
Is an element of truth that people agree on it? If not I don't see how it matters that people can argue about it. But if *you* believe something is true, then there cannot be a convincing argument to the contrary for you. — Echarmion
I would say it's reliability. You need to be able to rely on the prediction of what will happen, so you can base your decisions/ designs on this.
Is that a fundamental attribute of truth? I would say it is. For something to be true it must be a reliable — Echarmion
Is that a fundamental attribute of truth? I would say it is. For something to be true it must be a reliable — Echarmion
I have no idea what this would mean. — Echarmion
Surely, neither merely believing something is true nor believing that no arguments against one's position are convincing does anything to guarantee reliability. It's one's reasons for believing something is true that determine that truth's reliability. Reasons that are measurable, and have been repeatedly verified are reliable, aren't such factors like these determinative of reliability? — Judaka
Words and ideas must be redefined within the context of science, and adhere to scientific standards, that's a prerequisite for doing science. — Judaka
I agree that we must be convinced that something is true to call it true. "For someone to call something true, they must believe it is", sure I agree with that. But how does that give us reliability? — Judaka
It means that within the context of science, someone saying X is true means it has met the prerequisites of science, and within the context of something else, like art, X is beautiful because it met the prerequisites for one to find it beautiful. Those prerequisites were just that they found X beautiful, and their belief just reflects their personal interpretation and experience. It wouldn't even cross our minds to challenge the "reliability" of the truth about X's beauty as it would in the scientific context. I was just saying that we don't treat truths the same across all contexts. It's the scientific process that gives the truth its reliability in the scientific context, rather than the truth being necessarily reliable. This is what my OP is about. — Judaka
That's definitely not what truth is. Science makes use of language where truths are inherently pragmatic and goal-orientated. We can test the "effectiveness of X" or "compare the effectiveness of X and Y". It might be true that method X is effective if it fulfils the objective, and true that another method is superior because it can be done faster and more cheaply. We want methods that better accomplish our many goals, such as being more environmentally friendly or safer for workers and so on. — Judaka
Science pursues truth, namely scientific truth. It does not pursue non-scientific truth, such as philosophical or political truths. — Leontiskos
So, there are all of these different types of truths, dozens of them, potentially infinite, and science pursues only one of these. — Judaka
Why not just say that science is the pursuit of "scientific truth" and not truth? — Judaka
Reliability means more than simply believing it. It means you're willing to risk something. — Echarmion
I think the art example is problematic because not everyone would agree that "this picture is beautiful" has a truth value. — Echarmion
It seems to me what's different among the different contexts is the prerequisites of the argument. — Echarmion
I'd like to instead use a moral argument. Say: "Murder is immoral". I think most people would agree that this statement has a truth value. — Echarmion
"The sum of the interior angle measures of a triangle always adds up to 180°." — Echarmion
are not the same. I would agree that science is not "the" pursuit of truth. — Arne
That's a good pickup. — Janus
Agreed. The purpose of science is to tell us what it can about nature, not to define it. — Arne
Science pursues truth. It does not pursue expediency, or the promotion of special interests, or the winning of the arms race, etc. (and yet many are deeply confused on this point today). — Leontiskos
Scientific truth is one kind of truth, and therefore scientists pursue truth. Apparently you ran into someone who thinks that only scientists pursue truth, and you reacted by claiming that, "It's incorrect [...] to understand science as a 'pursuit of truth'." The person you ran into is wrong. So are you. You overcorrected. Science is not the only pursuit of truth, but it is a pursuit of truth. — Leontiskos
science isn't "the pursuit of truth" but "the pursuit of truth under a particular set of circumstances", and these circumstances are what we call science. — Judaka
If truth is a language tool then I think mental concept is equally a language tool. Science is just a biological activity, a special case of the same biological activity that allows the use of words like "truth" and "mental concept". — Apustimelogist
What is a "mental concept"? — Judaka
Aren't all concepts linguistic? — Judaka
We use language to express our thoughts and feelings, a view I'm not convinced you oppose. Language is public, words are used by all, and so even when you say "things we actually expect to be real", you have to be more specific, what makes something real? Is beauty not real? What about kindness, or wisdom or whatever else? Is it not true that some movies are better than others? Or that someone can sing better than someone else? Is it true that I'm as good as Messi at soccer? — Judaka
Truth is a word changed by its context. — Judaka
If I claimed that "X shop is selling doughnuts at Y price" and you asked, "Is that true?" I would fully appreciate that you wanted to verify the information was reliable. Equally, if I said "The doughnuts from X shop are delicious", and you asked, "Is that true?", I would appreciate that you knew this is not a matter where my opinion was definitive. If you ate some and said they weren't that good, you wouldn't call me a liar, you'd just know it was a difference in taste/opinion. — Judaka
One of the categories your mind uses to work. — Echarmion
This example works just as well if we assume the term "truth" does exactly the same in both sentences and the difference lies entirely in the claim itself. — Echarmion
My position is indeed that "truth" is just a language tool. It's not "a way to emphasise a statement", it refers to "correct reference", or "the correct answer" or it affirms a statement. — Judaka
Truth is a word changed by its context. — Judaka
Yes, that is the claim you're making, I know. — Echarmion
That context is determinative of truth's qualities. One puts it together for themselves. Whether a truth claim is about "something real" or not. — Judaka
I agree with others that it's wrong to say "Science pursues truth", since science has no will of its own. — Judaka
Isn't your argument with me just semantics? — Judaka
science isn't "the pursuit of truth" but "the pursuit of truth under a particular set of circumstances", and these circumstances are what we call science. — Judaka
What makes you insist that there are multiple "kinds" of truth? To be clear, I was just humouring you earlier. — Judaka
What sort of categories are you referring to? — Judaka
You don't seem to understand my claim though. You seem to think I'm arguing that the "change" is a literal rewrite of the word's meaning and that's not the case at all. The "change" is:
That context is determinative of truth's qualities. One puts it together for themselves. Whether a truth claim is about "something real" or not. — Judaka
Ok. And how is this relevant? — Echarmion
If you write that "context determines truth's qualities, then to me that sounds like "a literal rewrite of the word's meaning". — Echarmion
It seems like we're talking past each other and not getting our points across. — Echarmion
The basic building blocks for thinking and experiencing. Like causality, basic logic operations, basic concepts that allow you to sort and make sense of sensory input. — Echarmion
The problem is that you are using false statements to support your claim that not all truth is scientific truth. — Leontiskos
That's like saying, "Science isn't Y, but Y under Z, and Z is what we call 'science'." The sentence isn't even coherent. — Leontiskos
Oh, is that right? So you don't think that some truths are scientific truths and some truths are not? You're all tied up in knots. — Leontiskos
Science pursues truth, namely scientific truth. It does not pursue non-scientific truth, such as philosophical or political truths. — Leontiskos
I agree that there is such thinking that doesn't rely on language.
So, what is the relationship you're proposing between these categories and the words used to refer to them? — Judaka
It could have meant that, but it's part of a paragraph that goes on to explain those changes in qualities, which did not include any major changes to how truth functions. Using that context and my the context of my previous statements, I had hoped my meaning was made clear. Nonetheless, I clarified the misunderstanding, isn't this what I should've done? — Judaka
Since humans are capable of entertaining counterfactuals and also of dealing with probabilities and necessary elements, I'd say that there needs to be some faculty for sorting things into possibility/necessity/actuality. — Echarmion
We'd then expect to have language that corresponds to these. — Echarmion
If it's true that there's a tiger in the bush, I must act immediately. — Echarmion
So "truth" would correspond to actuality. — Echarmion
Well, my problem is that I can't really tell what your point is. — Echarmion
My response to this idea is that I do think truth has the same core meaning, or function, across different contexts — Echarmion
Your understanding of the OP wasn't my intention, and I agree with you that truth has the same core function across different contexts.
Where we seem to disagree is on the core function itself.
The point of the OP doesn't make any sense using your understanding of truth's core function as referring to "actuality", and that's maybe why you didn't get it. If you try thinking about it from how I explained "truth" then probably you will. — Judaka
Are you saying possibility/necessity etc are concepts that exist without language, and language merely corresponds to these (mental) concepts? — Judaka
Right, but it's only true that there's a tiger in the bush if it's "correct to say" that there's a tiger in the bush. It's only correct to say that there's a tiger in the bush if there really is a tiger in the bush. Even if "truth" is "correct reference" or "correct answer", it would have served the function you wanted in the example you gave.
I'll again reiterate that I am confident that you do not use the word truth to refer to actuality, you use it as "correct reference" or "correct answer". — Judaka
To answer if it's true that "There's a tiger in the bush", one must understand the concepts "is", "tiger", "in" and "bush". If the tiger is behind the bush or in front of it, or if it's a lion and not a tiger, or if it was in the bush, but already left, then "There is a tiger in the bush" is false. I could say "There is a predator in the bush" or "There is something in the bush" and these could be true as well as "There is a tiger in the bush". It's clear that "truth" corresponds to the "correctness" of the statement, which is based on the applicability of the language used. — Judaka
Why must it do that? — Judaka
I don't understand this, specifically I don't understand why actuality and "correct reference" aren't one and the same here. — Echarmion
So truth always signals the applicability of the language used in the claim to the situation? — Echarmion
But basically it seems to me there needs to be some common mental framework language can use — Echarmion
I just meant it as what is actually the case as opposed to what's possible. — Echarmion
I like the somewhat playful phrase that truth is that which asserts itself regardless of your wishes. — Echarmion
Is there a truth value to "This box is too heavy to carry"? If "this box" weighs 5kg or 50kg, or if one person is carrying it, or eight, would you agree that such factors are relevant? The box might be "too heavy" to carry without risk of injury, but not "too heavy" to carry if we disregard the risk of injury. My point is that the statement has multiple truth values. — Judaka
I tend to stay away from technical discussions about what truth is exactly, since they never seem terribly productive — Echarmion
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