Indeed, but the question here is not merely whether you make such a distinction, but whether the dependence claim of anti-realism is tenable.
To make the distinction between a thing and language which talks about it, on its own, does not identify a commitment to whether or not things exist independently of experience. — TheWillowOfDarkness
In the drawing of the distinction between lounge and the things it talks about, each state is defined on its own terms, not whether it is thought or spoken about. Nothing is depedent on being thought of spoken about.
That a thing is defined on its own terms, rather than whether it is spoken or thought about, IS realist metaphysics. It is not semantics at all. — TheWillowOfDarkness
A chair can exist (what is required for someone to be able to make a true statement about a chair) whether or not anyone thinks or speaks about it.
Realism is a metaphysical position (i.e. logic).
But that makes no sense because, if we are talking about an existing tree, there is no "anti-realist" or "realist" option. An existing tree is the same, a state of the world, regardless of whether we think it is dependent of experience or not. To be realist or anti-realist about an existing tree is incoherent. — TheWillowOfDarkness
One can accept that a tree is defined as a member of the category that excludes experience, conception, and language whilst also accepting that the statement "the tree exists" is dependent on experience, conception, and language (e.g. if one adopts the coherence theory of truth). That's why one can be an anti-realist whilst maintaining a logical (or, rather, semantic) distinction between trees and "trees". — Michael
Now you are talking about merely the existence of the statement "the tree exists," as opposed to the truth "the tree exists." — TheWillowOfDarkness
Nor do you make any comment on the distinction between states of the world and language which talks about them.
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