Ok, so my point is that a propositions being true is not the very same thing as a propositions being verifiable; there are, of course, verifiable falsehoods... — Banno
He's saying that a statement is true iff it can be verified as true (and presumably false iff it can be verified as false). — Michael
I doubt that I have missed much. — Banno
The other point is that it makes no sense to say that a proposition is true unless it is verified; — Janus
I think your "...it makes no sense to say..." here hides that you are adopting an attitude towards the proposition. That is, you have stoped talking about truth, and moved on to talking about belief. — Banno
I am saying that although of course we could be wrong about the truth of any proposition it makes no sense to say that a proposition is true unless it is verified to the best of our current ability. — Janus
What is an axiom if not an unverified truth?
And hinge propositions or bedrock propositions or whatever you wish to call them, are unverified truths. — Banno
You still haven't attempted to answer my question as to whether there were true propositions before the advent of humanity, or whether there will be after humanity is extinct. — Janus
SO did a triceratops have three horns? — Banno
Again, knowing that some proposition is true is not the same as that proposition's being true. — Banno
You still haven't attempted to answer my question as to whether there were true propositions before the advent of humanity, or whether there will be after humanity is extinct.
— Janus
SO did a triceratops have three horns? — Banno
Probably, but what relevance does that have? — Janus
Probably — Janus
Again, knowing that some proposition is true is not the same as that proposition's being true.
— Banno
Again, that's irrelevant. — Janus
The group of words can be interpreted in different ways, and can be true or false depending on the interpretation. The proposition is, as you say, always already an interpretation. So this interpretation, which comprises the proposition, must be always already verified as the correct interpretation. Therefore there cannot be an unverified true proposition. The proposition is by its very nature already verified, and it is only by means of this "verified correct interpretation" that it may be true or false. — Metaphysician Undercover
Failure to commit is a common symptom of antirealism. Do you suffer that affliction? — Banno
You appear to be arguing in bad faith, now. — Janus
DO you agree that some proposition's being true is not the same as Janus knowing that the proposition is true? — Banno
...a proposition is only true if it would be verified as true after exhaustive inquiry. — Janus
...knowing that some proposition is true is not the same as that proposition's being true. — Banno
The only out I could see for you is to go back to something like Meta's position: — Banno
But Banno doesn't seem to recognize that an act of verification, perhaps a different sort of verification, is required in order that a proposition may be true. — Metaphysician Undercover
Janus seems to confuse justified with true — Metaphysician Undercover
Here you appear to be using "verification" for some form of interpretation - so are you saying that in order to be true a proposition must be understood? How would that be different from saying that in order to be true a proposition must be a proposition?
Hence, I do not understand your point. — Banno
Not at all; I have explained many times now to apparently little avail, considering Banno's responses (only Michael seems to have understood) that I count being justified as equivalent to being counted as true. — Janus
Would it makes sense to say that we count anything as true without justification? — Janus
But this is impossible because understanding is not the type of thing which a person shares with another. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's exactly what I said, you confuse justified with true. Here you just admitted so much by saying that you count being justified as equivalent to being true. Therefore you see no difference between being justified and being true. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, it does make sense to say that. I think we often say that we believe something is true without being able to justify why we believe it is true. This is the case with intuition, it inclines one to believe in the truth of something without justification for that belief. — Metaphysician Undercover
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