Truth should be based on reoccurring incidents. — christian2017
We can't hold ourselves accountable for what we haven't found to be true based on reoccurring events and also we should regard what is told to us to some extent. — christian2017
In regards to the second quote, we can only hold ourselves accountable to our own notions of reality and in addition to that we should hold dear what we have been taught from our youth. — christian2017
Logic is the way that we think--specifically an abstracted way of thinking about certain kinds of relations. — Terrapin Station
Truth, by the way, is a judgment about the relation of propositions to something else, such as states of affairs. — Terrapin Station
I personally don't think we should discount something just because we can't guarantee it as absolute truth. — christian2017
And when our thinking is wrong or deficient in some manner, is it still logic or logical? — BrianW
But judgements can be misleading, and states of affairs can change. Can truth be either? — BrianW
In other words, you don't accept that either are defined by thought, and you're positing some sort of abstract, extramental existent instead. — Terrapin Station
With out consciessness truth can't be figured out. I believe truth should be built off simple concepts and simple concepts are added together to form complex concepts. — christian2017
Otherwise there would be no truth beyond people's thoughts and the truth we assert would have their limit of existence as the birth and death of humanity. — BrianW
Truth, for me, is not a property of propositions, firstly because propositions could lack truth(s) without losing their identity. — BrianW
Re this, falsehood is a property of propositions, too. "Truth is a property of propositions" isn't saying that all propositions are true. It's instead similar to "11th chords are a property of music." We're not saying all music has an 11th chord. — Terrapin Station
Re this: "I agree that facts are states of affairs but truth is the expression of the fundamental(s) of reality." "Fundamental(s) of reality" that somehow aren't states of affairs? — Terrapin Station
Therefore, truth(s) isn't always a property of propositions. So, what relation between truth and propositions are you expressing? — BrianW
But we don't designate the relative as the absolute manifest within. — BrianW
It's not a property of all propositions. But it's a property that only propositions have. It's not a property of something else. — Terrapin Station
But we don't designate the relative as the absolute manifest within.
— BrianW
What in the world is that? I haven't the faintest idea what that's saying. — Terrapin Station
What I was asking in this second part is how it would make sense to say that something i a "fundamental of reality" but not a state of affairs. — Terrapin Station
Not solely, no. But it is dependent on it in the sense that you won't get very far at all without it. You'll inevitably encounter a premise which requires empiricism in order to be true, or to be known to be true. — S
Right. At least on my view. On the alternate view, one would need (what I consider to be) a wonky ontology of propositions.Then we're back to truth being limited to humanity (in concepts, ideas, etc) — BrianW
Because, again I ask, wasn't there truth before the rise of humans?
Whether it's an atom, a human, planet, solar system, etc, neither is the whole of reality. Each is just an expression of reality, albeit a limited one in one way or other. — BrianW
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