So facts are mind-independent? I thought they were mind-dependent...
The present Kind of France is bald, is a fact that doesn't correspond to reality. What can you say about that>? — Posty McPostface
False propositions... ...represent unreal states of affairs or unreal relations among things. — aletheist
However, states of affairs cannot be exactly the same things as facts, since we can have imaginary or possible states of affairs, but it seems wrong to speak of "imaginary facts". — Janus
I'm asking what good reason there is to call them "states of affairs" when they are clearly not? — creativesoul
You do seem to be piddling... — Janus
What good reason is there to call hypotheticals imagined states of affairs? — creativesoul
That's all I ever do aside from systems analysis and creation... — creativesoul
What do all states of affairs have in common that make them what they are? — creativesoul
Hypotheticals are not necessarily imaginary states of affairs; they may turn out to be actual. The utility of the distinction between actual and imaginary states of affairs seems obvious.
To make distinctions, provided there are real differences between the things being distinguished, leads to clarity and nuanced thinking. — Janus
That they are concatenations of real or imaginary events, processes, things or relations. — Janus
States of affairs are what has already happened and/or is currently happening. That which may or may not happen has not yet happened.
There's a useful distinction in this context. — creativesoul
What do words like "unicorn" and "phoenix" represent? If your statement is correct, how are we able to talk about things and events that are in the future - i.e., that do not (yet) exist, and may never actually exist?If A represents B, then B must exist prior to A otherwise there's nothing to represent. — creativesoul
There are true propositions about Hamlet (the play) because Hamlet (the play) exists. There are propositions about Hamlet (the character) - such as "Hamlet was the prince of Denmark" - that are true only within the universe of discourse established by the play. Shakespeare really imagined and wrote about Hamlet as the prince of Denmark; but Hamlet was not really the prince of Denmark.Hamlet sets out a plethora of unreal states of affairs. There are true propositions about Hamlet. — creativesoul
So, the imaginary events described in a work of fiction are not events in your view? — Janus
If A represents B, then B must exist prior to A otherwise there's nothing to represent.
— creativesoul
What do words like "unicorn" and "phoenix" represent? — aletheist
If your statement is correct, how are we able to talk about things and events that are in the future - i.e., that do not (yet) exist, and may never actually exist? — aletheist
Why must something happen in order to count as an event? — Janus
If events rely on happening in order to qualify as events, then are past events no longer events since they are no longer happening? — Janus
Your proposed elimination of usages of the term 'event' to refer to imaginary or possible happenings seems pointless, since the distinction between actual and potential, possible or imaginary events is perfectly well understood by most everyone (apart from you apparently). — Janus
Past events happened. — creativesoul
Disagreement is not misunderstanding.
There is a difference between things that have happened and things that have not. — creativesoul
Yes, and future events will happen, possible events might happen and imagined events are imagined as happening. So what? — Janus
You don't appear to be understanding the distinctions between events which happen, are happening, will happen or might happen and events which are merely imagined to happen, to be happening, to be going to happen or to be likely to happen. — Janus
There are imagined events and there are actual events; they both involve concatenations of things, people, processes and/ or relations. — Janus
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