I'm a plain language person, so what I'll be saying next may not be as precise in philosophical terminology as others might put it. — EricH
However, the state of affairs to them is neither true nor false. I’m saying that the state of affairs is part of the objective Truth, which is why a statement can be said to be true when it corresponds to It. — AJJ
The statement is false because it doesn’t correspond to something that is true, i.e. part of the Truth. It would be true if the cat being on the mat was true, i.e part of the Truth. — AJJ
Substitute the word “reality” for “Truth” if you like. In that case something that is false would be so because it is not part of “reality”. But “reality” there just refers to the objective Truth. — AJJ
If the cat is not sitting on the mat then it’s false that the cat is sitting on the mat. — AJJ
The “something” there is the state of affairs of the cat sitting on the mat. — AJJ
For me “true” can refer to statements and propositions that correspond to the objective Truth. It can also refer to things that are part of the objective Truth, i.e. facts. — AJJ
I'm not getting this. If the cat is explicitly not sitting on the mat, then it cannot be the state of affairs that the cat is sitting on the mat. The state of affairs is that the cat is not sitting on the mat. — EricH
By “objective” I mean existing independent of thought. I’ve been using it where I don’t absolutely need to when the other person has a different definition of “truth”. — AJJ
For me “true” can refer to statements and propositions that correspond to the objective Truth. It can also refer to things that are part of the objective Truth, i.e. facts. — AJJ
Actually, if “I ought to believe lies” is true then I don’t think it does lead to a paradox. It seems to me you just can’t justify it like you can with the truth. — AJJ
Out of curiosity, does the author use objective that way? — boethius
Also, if the "truth" refers to the "beliefs" (beliefs corresponding to facts corresponding to reality, or real states of affairs, or the case etc.) then there is no truth independent of thought.
The usual word in philosophy for reality independent of our thoughts about it, is "the noumena", which again comes from Kant referring to the "the thing in itself". We see phenomena in our minds that we infer arises from some noumena that gave rise to the phenomena. — boethius
Well unless you can explain how literally "not reading" is useful for reading comprehension, I'm unable to take much stock in your opinion on reading comprehension. — boethius
The problem with this is that you're using "true" to refer to two completely different ideas, and you're expecting the different ideas to be clear via using a capital letter for one of the words. You'd have to always explain your usage there, though, because it's completely novel.
The way I'm using "fact" is a very mundane, standard way to use that term in the sciences, philosophy, etc. — Terrapin Station
It’s not novel. Perhaps start reading a little more widely. — AJJ
“Truth” doesn’t refer to beliefs. That would make it subjective. Truth independent of thought is objective. — AJJ
I think if a state of affairs can be described as impossible then it can be described as false. Either way your describing something that isn’t true. — AJJ
Basically states of affairs are relations of existent things, as well as properties of existent things. Things exist, they have properties, and they are situated in certain (dynamic) ways with respect to other existent things. Those are states of affairs. — Terrapin Station
Given this definition, any state of affairs cannot be described as impossible because there ain't no such thing as an impossible state of affairs. — EricH
You can make statements/propositions about hypothetical states of affairs in ways that are contradictory and/or false. — EricH
Are you seeing that as controversial? If x is a state of affairs, then x isn't impossible. That seems fairly obvious, no? — Terrapin Station
Sure, but then what we're describing isn't actually a state of affairs — Terrapin Station
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