In what sense are you meaning truth as myriad, and why? I get what you mean, and no that is not what I mean. I mean it as I wrote. And yes, but that is the problem with philosophy. — Nasir Shuja
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Nasir Shuja
86
↪Frank Apisa
Before I reply could you expand on this a little bit? — Nasir Shuja
arguments over those differences often takes over for fundamental topics in which it comes to be used. — Nasir
Clearly atheist could mean a variety of things, and often times the communication is less than ideal. Much seems to be lost in translation/naming, but if by Mona Lisa I mean this picture and you do too, how can we really argue with that when we both point at it?
Nasir Shuja
88
↪Frank Apisa
Yes, you are misunderstanding my argument. My argument is that words have meanings *only within* contexts, and because there is meaning in those contexts only, no matter if we don't realize we are talking about the same thing or if we think we are but aren't, there is still meaning (an abstract or sensory object), which could be known by others if the circumstance allows. I do not mean it as the standard textbook version of meaning. In philosophical discussions, or a court of law, we encounter this at its peak, which is why communication can be tricky. Again, i am not arguing for an objective, referential view of language, quite the opposite. — Nasir Shuja
You seem to claim that language is so vague that the apparent logical picture of reality I need for my argument is not the case. — Nasir Shuja
I apologize, I use the word truth in two ways. The first is to describe what happens in a context where we all do approach reality from different vantage points, where knowledge is possible in language or some other mysterious way. But by truth I am also referring to the singular reality (not logical truth) that that knowledge is about, inferring it is there because I am not a solipsist/skeptic essentially. So I don't really disagree. — Nasir Shuja
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