He was maybe saying that relativism can't be radical. — frank
Belief is more than sufficient for X to be called true... — creativesoul
If the essence of a conceptual scheme can be located in a far-ranging belief, are we back to square one? Back to an essentially (although a belief- rather than a concept-based) relativistic picture? — ZzzoneiroCosm
What is the significance of the rejection of conceptual schemes if our beliefs continue to paint a picture of fundamentally different ontologies (and sister -ologies)? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Belief seems just as potent in creating a kind of weltanschauung-relativism. Different people believe the world fits best into such and such a belief system. Not such a far cry from conceptual relativism. Maybe someone can clarify the distinction. — ZzzoneiroCosm
What is the significance of the rejection of conceptual schemes if our beliefs continue to paint a picture of fundamentally different ontologies (and sister -ologies)?
— ZzzoneiroCosm
Again, a belief is statable. — Banno
Statable by whom? — creativesoul
The only difference I see is that I have a dislike for using the word "concept". I don;t see that my view is so different to Davidson's. — Banno
I’m going going to put Soames’ explanation for why Davidson’s argument fails in my own words. I’m really not much of a logician, so it took me a while to get it. You can look at Soames' history of analytical philosophy in the Davidson section to get it straight from him.
Lets start with a language L (which isn’t English). This is an unusual language because there are only two sentences of this language. Don’t worry, it will be obvious why this generalizes when we’re done.
We’ll call these two sentences X and Y. If we translate X into English, we’ll get sentence x. If we translate Y into English, we’ll get sentence y.
Now we’re going to do something with Tarski. This is going to involve something that Tarski calls a truth predicate, but I want to make sure you don’t get the impression that this is the regular truth predicate that we all know and love. This is a special Tarskian thing. I’m not even going to call it “true” because that will cause confusion. I’m just going to call it T.
I’m going to tell you that T is a property of s iff
s is ‘X’ AND x
OR
s is ‘Y’ AND y
The above is a definition of the T-predicate. Don’t suppose this means we defined truth. We can’t do that. Just to make sure the above is clear, I’ll use Soames’ example: s is T iff s is ‘La camisa es azul’ AND The shirt is blue. It just helped me to change the sentences into variables.
Now we’ll look at something closer to the T-sentence format:
‘X’ is T iff x (‘La camisa es azul’ is T iff the shirt is blue.) This bolded T-sentence-like object is meant to create the impression we can use T to derive the meaning of a sentence of L.
Let's look at the first part of the bolded sentence: 'X' has T as a property. When does our definition of T say about this? When would 'X' have T as a property?
Either when 'X' is 'X' AND x
OR when 'X' is 'Y' AND y
The lower part obviously can't be, so we’re left with: 'X' is 'X' AND x
Now let's add the rest of the bolded T-sentence like object:
('X' is 'X' AND x) iff x
This above statement is a triviality that results from the T-sentence rule triviality it was born from. We can't use it for much of anything.
Maybe tomorrow we could talk about what happens to Davidson's argument when we actually put a dose of Truth in it. — frank
Better to ask what is right. Pangolin scales? What's that about. — Banno
Good for you. Just so long as you do not conclude , as you did, that a statement's being true requires it's being believed. — Banno
Could that be done in common ordinary language? — creativesoul
As i recall you referred to a book. One that might be quite interesting - so I put it on my wish list. — Banno
You have voiced your inability to articulate the criticism — Banno
it's a bit rich to insist on a reply to a critique that has not been clearly presented by ↪Moliere — Banno
For my part, the takeaway is that T-sentences say just about all that can be said about truth, and that relativism with respect to truth is wrong. Also pretty much agree with the critique of Davidson presented by — Banno
Happy to address either of these - if you put something together. — Banno
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