The problem is that it's not objective. It's subjective.Are there different sorts of truth? Is "objective truth" meaningful? — Mongrel
Standardly in analytic philosophy, truth is a property of propositions. And namely, it's a relation between a proposition and something else. The something else depends on the truth theory in question. If one uses correspondence, the something else is states of affairs aka facts. If one uses coherence, the something else is one's other propositions accepted as true. if one uses consensus, the something else is communal agreement. Etc.I don't know what it could mean to say that truth is objective. The idea of truth seems to be the idea of something really being the case; the idea of an objective state of affairs or actuality. So, truth is the idea of the objective, it is of the objective, but is not itself objective, it is of actuality, but is not itself actual. — John
I agree. I don't think "objective" means good or charitable.Thinking more about this. If reason/rationality is a necessary part of "the bones" of what it takes to make a good, charitable, say objective interpretation, I don't think that entails that the perspective itself needs to be rational, good or charitable since I think all perspectives are normative and norms are not necessarily rational, good or charitable. Interpretation is methodological, not epistemic (perhaps). — Cavacava
So perhaps truth is one, but that can't be proven on the basis of multiple perspectives, since while translations between perspectives, may possible, they do may not necessarily convey with the same meaning, since they are interpreted using different presuppositions. — Cavacava
One thing that I think causes confusion in these discussions is differing interpretations re whether the term "objective" in "objective truth" or "objective statement" refers to what the statement is about, or is instead a (putative) property of a truth or a statement itself.But I regard objective truth as pertaining to statements that are made regarding empirical objects and forces. In other words, an objective statement ought to be corroborated with reference to the measurement of something existent. Whereas mathematical proofs are not objective in that sense, even though to all intents they are regarded as objective statements. — Wayfarer
"What is the case" would normally be another way of saying "fact" or "state of affairs." The reason that analytic philosophy stressed that "truth" is different than "what is the case" is that if we say that "truth" is "what is the case," that would suggest that "falsehood" is "what isn't the case." But what sort of existence does "what isn't the case" have? None. So there are no falsehoods? That's not right, is it?Agree with John that truth is just "what is the case". In my opinion, objectivity has to do with justification, and not with truth per se. — Aaron R
It claims a property that's a category error in this case. ;-)One wonders what kind of conceptual work the qualifier 'objective' in 'objective truth' does. — StreetlightX
Well, my idea, at any rate, is that the relation between a proposition and facts, say (if we're using correspondence, and I do) is something that requires a mind to make a judgment about. What doesn't make any sense to me is supposing that the relation can somehow obtain mind-independently.the idea of 'truth for someone' can't be made sense of — The Great Whatever
"What is the case" would normally be another way of saying "fact" or "state of affairs." — Terrapin
Okay, but then there's a problem with the idea of natural language somehow being either the same or at least mappable to facts aside from judgments that we make about that relationship — Terrapin
If they're not focusing on people mentally judging the relation, that would require some sort of mapping or comparison mechanism, too.The story being told in both cases goes something like this: there's no problem of how thought maps to the world because the structure of the world matches the structure of thought. — Aaron R
See also the notion of "pansemiosis" that has become in-vogue among some of Peirce's successors in contemporary semiotic theory. The story being told in both cases goes something like this: there's no problem of how thought maps to the world because the structure of the world matches the structure of thought. — Aaron R
I think pansemiosis has to be more subtle than that. It says instead that the structure of thought and the structure of the world both share the deeper structure that is the structure of semiosis, or the sign relation. — apokrisis
So in practice, existence is still divided into thinking creatures and thoughtless world — apokrisis
What would that even mean.the "thoughtless world", although it doesn't 'possess thoughts' is always already in the form of thought. — John
I wonder where the heck that "deeper structure of semiosis" is supposed to be located in that case. — Terrapin Station
Right, but the "thoughtless world", although it doesn't 'possess thoughts' is always already in the form of thought. To put it another way, 'anything' that is not in the form of thought is as nothing. — John
Well, is it just identical to the world and the mind? In that case, calling it a "deeper structure" doesn't make much sense. — Terrapin Station
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