Banno
I can't imagine a more idealist treatment of language than that. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
Banno
from it's 'bodily instantiation' in real use among living, fleshy, community-dwelling humans: — StreetlightX
Streetlight
gurugeorge
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
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
tEd
So, are facts only exclusive to the correspondence theory of truth?
I'm wondering. — Posty McPostface
sime
sime
Akanthinos
So, what are facts in a coherentist view of meaning and truth? — Posty McPostface
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.