What do you think? — TheMadFool
My view now is: the ordinary logical form does not and cannot accurately reproduce the sentence-meaning. It makes an entirely different statement. That in a way is the point of Wittgenstein's shift from the Tractatus view to the Investigations view: most 'propositions' are judgments, not statements of fact. — mcdoodle
From what I've read, the point of logic is to capture only those elements in a sentence that have logical import — TheMadFool
But if the meaning of future-contingent propositions are their use, then before the future has arrived they are reducible to the assertion or denial of present behavioural dispositions. — sime
But what then do we do with what's left over? There will always be some surplus of meaning left behind in ordinary language which logic hasn't captured. Logic, then wouldn't provide a translation, nor an interpretation, but a narrowing of meaning — mcdoodle
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.