But I am saying that. — Wayfarer
I'm having trouble parsing this one — Wayfarer
But you can't split them. You're trying to divide or separate knowledge from what is real. I say it's because you're taking a view above or outside both the subject (you) and the object (world) - or trying to (cf Nagel's 'view from nowhere'). — Wayfarer
It is the thesis that truth requires mind that seems to face a problem, for that theory entails that if no minds exist, there are no truths (yet it seems metaphysically for there to be no minds yet for there to be truths, for something can exist and not be a mind, and under such circumstances it would be true that it exists. — Clearbury
...self-subsistent truths floating independently of any minds. — Leontiskos
Knowledge and truth? Well, perhaps you can't. That's one of the odd consequences of treating truth as a propositional attitude. So much the worse for your ideas. For the rest of us, there is a difference between what is true and what is known. You know, everything we know is true, some stuff we think we know is actually false, in which case we are mistaken about knowing it, there are truths we don't know, the usual stuff.But you can't split them. — Wayfarer
Again, fabricating stuff. Try reading.It is interesting that Banno looks like a Platonist, with self-subsistent truths floating independently of any minds. — Leontiskos
The Timeless Wave. I don't think it is really 'mystical' although it does consider the idea of what is outside space-time.) — Wayfarer
(This is also represented by constructive empiricism, as advocated by Bas Van Fraassen — Wayfarer
No.I take Banno to be advocating metaphysical realism as defined in SEP — Wayfarer
Going back to the main point I'd like to make here, one can be a realist in one area and an anti-realistin another. So for my part, I've argued against typical examples of anti-realism such as pragmatic theory, logical positivism, transcendental idealism and Berkeley's form of idealism. I have however also defended a constructivist view of mathematics, an anti-realist position; and off-handedly rejected realism in ethics and aesthetics. — Banno
I think what you say is more similar to logical positivists who are more stringent that meaning in scientific theories is tied to observability. — Apustimelogist
You know, everything we know is true, some stuff we think we know is actually false, in which case we are mistaken about knowing it, there are truths we don't know, the usual stuff. — Banno
Jerrold J. Katz offers a radical reappraisal of the "linguistic turn" in twentieth-century philosophy. He shows that the naturalism that emerged to become the dominant philosophical position was never adequately proved. Katz critiques the major arguments for contemporary naturalism and develops a new conception of the naturalistic fallacy. This conception, inspired by Moore, explains why attempts to naturalize linguistics and logic, and perhaps ethics, will fail. He offers a Platonist view of such disciplines, justifying it as the best explanation of their autonomy, their objectivity, and their normativity. — Metaphysics of Meaning
You know that analytic philosophy has its roots in critique of Hegel and Kant, — Banno
Come on. Strawson's Bounds of Sense.I think 'rejection' would be more like it. — Wayfarer
You say such things to me, yes, but in other posts you tend towards a much more stringent - even strident - idealism. You invoke the thing-in-itself, which is a nonsense. Even worse, a little while ago, your posited that the world might be constructed by mind out of nothing... so not even the unintelligible thing-in-itself....the world as we experience and understand it is always mediated by the structures of the mind. — Wayfarer
So we have at least one truth. — Banno
So the claim is that when all life dies out there will be gold in Boorara but no truths or falsehoods because there will be no propositions. — Michael
A proposition can be assessed at a possible world, which might be the actual world. The proposition isn't inside the world. Propositions don't have location or temporal extension. — frank
You're doing what I said, which is making an assertion at a possible world. Asserting P is the same thing as saying that P is true. — frank
All languages will die out eventually, and when they do no true propositions will exist; — Michael
One does not need to believe that propositions are abstract entities that continue to exist even after the death of all life to talk about propositions. — Michael
Maybe you disagree with conceptualists, but they are quite welcome to talk about propositions without committing to Platonism. — Michael
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