It's intended to be a necessary feature of a good truth theory, basically. That's why it's unclear if you ought to characterize Tarski's theory of truth as deflationary or correspondence, because the T-scheme works for both. — MindForged
Wha is it that makes a statement true, such that the cat is on the mat is not false or meaningless?
I'm failing to see how deflation addresses that question. — Marchesk
It's a logical relation. If the statement "the cat is on the mat" is true then that entails that the cat is on the mat (the condition). Conversely, if the cat is not on the mat, that entails that the statement is false. — Andrew M
What is it that makes, "The cat is on the mat", true? Because it's not a logical relation that does that. Not if there is reference to a cat and a mat in the world. — Marchesk
Now if the statement is just a logic statement, then these three are equivalent. [...] — Marchesk
Which is fine for logic, but it tells us nothing about whether it's true or false that it's raining outside today in Lisbon. — Marchesk
In ordinary usage, "The cat is on the mat" is not expressing a logical proposition, but rather is making a statement about a situation in the world. And it is that situation which makes the statement or false, not logic. That's how true and false is used outside of logic. — Marchesk
If you want to know whether a statement is true or false, then you need to go out and look. — Andrew M
The truth schema won't help you with that. It just tells you what condition needs to obtain in order for the statement to be true. — Andrew M
Yes, the statement can be an ordinary empirical statement. But the relation between the statement and the truth condition is a logical one. — Andrew M
A deflationist does not attempt to define truth. — frank
What is a deflationist trying to accomplish or say? — Marchesk
That truth doesn't involve all these other metaphysical commitments and ought not be involved in explanations of meaning because it serves no explanatory function. — MindForged
What is a deflationist trying to accomplish or say? — Marchesk
Whatever justifies or lends warrant to accepting "the cat is on the mat" gives exactly the same warrant for accepting "It's true that the cat is on the mat". — MindForged
...truth doesn't involve all these other metaphysical commitments and ought not be involved in explanations of meaning because it serves no explanatory function.
β MindForged
Right, but how does that work? — Marchesk
By virtue of truth being necessarily presupposed in all meaningful thought, belief, and statements thereof... — creativesoul
That truth is an unanalyzable concept.
If you attempt to present a definition, you assume your audience already understands what truth is because it's an aspect of the act of assertion.
It's too basic to communication to define. — frank
Right. It's the going out and looking which is important. — Marchesk
But the deflationist is leaving the satisfying of conditions off their account of truth.
The cat is on the mat is true if and only if there exists a specific cat in the world on a specific mat in the world being referred to, when making an empirical claim. — Marchesk
these are justifications, not theoriesnof truth. — Banno
But some condition does have to be met, otherwise the statement is false or not truth-apt. So in the case of the cat on the mat, there has to be some cat on some mat that's being talked about. Same for snow being white and it's raining outside.
One thing to note about those is there seems to be a general condition that's being met for the empirical domain, which is that the condition is something being a certain way in the world. That's where the common correspondence intuition comes from.
Facthood in particular is a real problem for the correspondence theorist. Are there negative facts? Facts relating to conditionals and implications? These must, by their lights, be made true by something in the world but they're clearly not the sort of things that have a correspondence in the world, which conflicts with the reification of facts or states of affairs in this that theory. — MindForged
The former seems plain unacceptable to the correspondence theorist because facts are about how the world is (states of how things really are) not how it isn't. — MindForged
Related to that is the notion of counterfactuals.
If Clinton had won the election then ...
Is that made true by some non-obtaining state of affairs? — Michael
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