But if by truth and falsity you mean something not definable in terms of doubt and belief in any way, then you are talking of entities of whose existence you can know nothing, and which Ockham's razor would clean shave off. . — Janus
Well, if we presume that we cannot speak of truth and falsity with any certainty, then it follows that we must come outside of ourselves and our beliefs/doubts to arrive at possible 'eternal truths'. — Marcus de Brun
Infinity by its nature is infinite and therefore truths that have an infinite nature must be closer to THE truth (if such a thing exists), than temporal truths which are eroded by time. — Marcus de Brun
Therefore can we then suggest that enduring truths are more true by virtue of their persistence in time?. — Marcus de Brun
Yes, I think this is what Peirce has in mind, although I think it would be more apt to have said merely 'true" than "more true". Or perhaps the idea could be reversed so that 'we then suggest that enduring truths persist in time in virtue of their truth'. "Their truth" here consisting in the absence of reason to doubt them. — Janus
What is 'it' (outside of belief or doubt) about truth that determines its temporal persistence? — Marcus de Brun
Are there 'ever lasting truths'? If given enough time, will all truths as we know them today ultimately become fallacy? — Marcus de Brun
As Peirce suggests in the quoted passage, you cannot separate truth from belief and doubt. We can entertain the idea of Absolute Truths that have no dependence on belief, but for the fallible human mere absolute truths are what we will, at the end of inquiry, have no reason to doubt. It's the best we can do. — Janus
don't think truths are functions of time in that they morph with whatever it is that happens between two points in time.
If I understand you correctly you seem to be implying truth changes from a to b to c from time t1 to t2 to t3. I don't think that's what's happening.
A truth x is true at ALL times. It's just that we don't see it as such and appears to us as "different" truths over time because we either didn't think it over properly or simply didn't know.
For instance slavery is wrong everywhere and anytime. We just didn't figure it out in the past. — TheMadFool
If by "truths" you mean true statements, then if they are properly indexed they will always be true, assuming that they are when formed. — creativesoul
Are there 'ever lasting truths'? If given enough time, will all truths as we know them today ultimately become fallacy? — Marcus de Brun
Truths, falsehoods, beliefs, etc. as mental phenomena only last as long as the mind conceiving/claiming them. What those truths/beliefs pick out in reality may change, whether perceiving and conceiving minds last or not. — numberjohnny5
we are assuming a temporal external reality independent of the individual consciousness. — Marcus de Brun
I believe that too. I'm a realist. But I'd also say that both internal and external "realities" are temporal (in other words, reality is temporal, period). — numberjohnny5
We are drifting off topic a bit, However, I would agree with the 'both realities' idea, however I suspect that what ultimately differentiates the two, is that one is temporal and the other is not. — Marcus de Brun
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Frequently, all too frequently, intelligent people have intelligent arguments upon the right or wrong nature of a particular thesis.
Philosophy is crowded with theses that are debated upon the basis of right or wrong. Many of today's truths are destined to become tomorrows fallacies.
Is it not therefore possible that intelligent people are always (or at least almost always) right AND wrong, and it is merely the context of the thesis, more specifically it's position in time that is the arbiter of truth.
Are there 'ever lasting truths'? If given enough time, will all truths as we know them today ultimately become fallacy? — Marcus de Brun
If the ball was foul, then Joe never hit a home run to begin with...
And that remains true for eternity as well, assuming it was to start with. — creativesoul
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