I can't imagine a more idealist treatment of language than that. — StreetlightX
from it's 'bodily instantiation' in real use among living, fleshy, community-dwelling humans: — StreetlightX
Where you take note of the differences, I note the similarity. Mental correlations. — creativesoul
Yeah but the similarities (as well as the differences) are inaccessible to us... — gurugeorge
That's just not true on it's face. Everyday facts show otherwise.
The position you're arguing for uses the notion of mental ongoings being inaccessible as a premiss. Methodologically speaking, it's similar to claiming water isn't accessible while using it to make cookies, or claiming that X and Y are different and we have no access to either.
Thought and belief are quite accessible. — creativesoul
I mean they're inaccessible to us in terms of being a shareable raw basis on which to build shared meaning. Obviously once we have shared meaning coming from objective shared habits, then we can easily compare our inner experiences. — gurugeorge
So, are facts only exclusive to the correspondence theory of truth?
I'm wondering. — Posty McPostface
So, what are facts in a coherentist view of meaning and truth? — Posty McPostface
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