 Michael
Michael         
          Agustino
Agustino         
         Not necessarily.If "I agree that there is a cup" and "there is a cup" mean different things (which they do under some metaphysical systems) then it does (and so could be true) — Michael
 Agustino
Agustino         
         Read my correction. "I agree that there is a cup" means what "there is a cup" means. It also means something more than just that. Do you not understand this?I'm really not sure how to understand that. If "I agree that there is a cup" and "there is a cup" mean different things then the negation of the latter ("there isn't a cup") doesn't contradict the former. — Michael
 Michael
Michael         
         Read my correction. "I agree that there is a cup" means what "there is a cup" means. — Agustino
It also means something more than just that. Do you not understand this?
"There is a cup" = Meaning 1
Meaning 1: I think there is a cup.
 Agustino
Agustino         
         When you make that statement "there is a cup" it means "I think there is a cup". The statement "there is a cup" itself is purely factual and independent of what you think, but obviously that isn't the case when you make it - it doesn't have that meaning. I mean there are difficulties because you could be for example hallucinating a cup, etc.So "there is a cup" and "I think there is a cup" mean the same thing? Then there is a cup iff I think there is a cup. — Michael
 Michael
Michael         
         When you make that statement "there is a cup" it means "I think there is a cup". The statement "there is a cup" itself is purely factual and independent of what you think, but obviously that isn't the case when you make it - it doesn't have that meaning. I mean there are difficulties because you could be for example hallucinating a cup, etc. — Agustino
 Deleteduserrc
Deleteduserrc         
          Michael
Michael         
          Agustino
Agustino         
         So whenever we say "there is a cup" we mean "I think there is a cup"? Then how can we ever (correctly) claim that "there is a cup" is a factual statement that is independent of what we think? Because in making this claim we're claiming that "I think there is a cup" is a factual statement that is independent of what we think. — Michael
 The Great Whatever
The Great Whatever         
         Does the above make sense? — Michael
 Michael
Michael         
          The Great Whatever
The Great Whatever         
          Michael
Michael         
         If you agree that Trump is the worst candidate for office, then you believe that Trump is the worst candidate for office. — darthbarracuda
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
          S
S         
         "I agree that there is a cup and there isn't a cup."
Does the above make sense? — Michael
If "I agree that there is a cup" and "there is a cup" mean different things... — Michael
But it could also be argued that the statements "I agree that there is a cup" and "there is a cup" are doing the same thing – asserting that there is a cup — Michael
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