‘Survival is unnecessary’ - is this statement true or false according to Reason? — Possibility
When Reason asserts that something is the case, it is the case. Her asserting it, and its being true are one and the same. — Bartricks
Apologies in advance for not having read the whole thread. — jorndoe
Why not start simpler? — jorndoe
Looks like conflating ontology and epistemics, truth and justification/beliefs, which has a few odd implications.
Ordinary logic is common to reasoning. — jorndoe
I see absolutely no justification for this claim.
What's this: "if an argument is valid and has true premises, then the conclusion is true"?
Well, it is an assertion I have made, certainly. I just made it. But that's not all. It is also asserted by Reason.
What do you think it is if not an assertion? — Bartricks
Reason directs, prescribes, asserts, values. Deal with it. — Bartricks
Of course it's your assertion I just don't agree with you that reason itself universally "asserts" anything. — Janus
Why should I accept a statement which issues from a misunderstanding due to a reification of an ambiguous way of thinking about reason? — Janus
‘Survival is unnecessary’ - is this statement true or false according to Reason?
— Possibility
Obviously that would depend.
Do you think it is true? If you think it is true, does that entail that it is true? If not, why not? — Bartricks
It is manifest in the way we perceive and/or understand it. Why would energy be potential? Because it is assigned a certain degree of probable capacity for work. Therefore, the potential of any energy is manifest with respect to activities and the conditions they take place in. — BrianW
I would guess this is true. But if we know they are false, that means they are not working in some way. They may be working in one way, but not in others. I think it is clear we might be wrong about some things we think are true. No idea of truth is going to eliminate this possibility. It seems like we are fallible. The other theories of truth, it seems to me, all boil down to some kind of pragmatismThere seems nothing confused in the idea that it may sometimes be useful to believe false propositions — Bartricks
Now, I have argued that truth is constituted by the assertions of Reason. That is, for a proposition to be true, is for Reason to be asserting its contents. — Bartricks
‘Survival is unnecessary’ - is this statement true or false according to Reason? — Bartricks
So what does Reason tell you about the truth of this statement? And what does its truth depend on (apart from an appeal to Reason, of course)? — Possibility
The obvious question is, what is Reason? and why the capital letter? Just to reifying it? — Banno
Anything that makes you feel you are better off today than yesterday is truth. — ovdtogt
you now ask "what does truth depend on (apart from the assertions of Reason)?" the answer is "nothing" - for that's like asking "what does water depend on, apart from hydrogen and oxygen?" It expresses a refusal either to understand or accept the analysis just provided. Which is your prerogative, of course, but the fact is that I've argued for it and the argument has yet to be challenged. — Bartricks
Is there a universal consensus among those who use their reason to figure out what truth is (philosophers) about what truth is?
No. There are just several theses, theses that most of those who are trying to figure out what truth is agree are not very plausible.
Given that there is, at present, no consensus on what truth is, it is worth asking "what would it take for there to be?"
That is, when would philosophers agree that they have found the true theory of truth?
That answer is unquestionably this: they would all agree that theory X is the true theory of truth when the reason of all of them represents theory X to be the true theory of X. For what more could anyone want than this? — Bartricks
Well, then it makes sense to suppose that 'that' is what truth is. That is, that truth itself is none other than the property of being a proposition that Reason is representing to be the case.
That's my reasoning.
So what does truth depend on?
Reason.
It depends on Reason asserting something. Why? Because if and only if she asserts something will anything be true. — Bartricks
And again, if we know it is false but it works, it is also not working. Not predicting some outcome, not explaining something. It is not useful in some way or we would not know it is false. The situation we are in is not with a list of truths where we can check the useful items and say these are useful but false, these are useful but true. All we have are claims that are useful in a wide variety of ways. A subet is their explanatory power and allowing us to work with something we want to work with in some way. Any truth that is not useful gives us no way to know it is true."Useful" and 'true' clearly denote different properties, otherwise the idea of a false but useful belief would make no sense (and it clearly does make sense). — Bartricks
Useful" and 'true' clearly denote different properties, otherwise the idea of a false but useful belief would make no sense (and it clearly does make sense). — Bartricks
idea of a false but useful belief would make no sense (and it clearly does make sense). — Bartricks
↪ovdtogt I was arguing for a pragmatic version of truth. — Coben
Well, there you go.Beliefs that are believed to be false have no usefulness. False beliefs that are believed to be true can be useful. — ovdtogt
Actually I would say that it does seem to be verified to most believers. They experience a presence. They are able to quite drugs. There will be some though nto entire verification. There is so much binary thinking around this issue, as if things are completely verified or not verified at all. Or completely true or not true at all.The fact that this belief (in God) remains useful, is because it can not be verified. — ovdtogt
Beliefs that are believed to be false have no usefulness. False beliefs that are believed to be true can be useful. — ovdtogt
Our belief in an anthropomorphic God may be false but that belief may still be useful. — ovdtogt
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