if we know what it takes for a statement to be true, then we know what the statement means? — creativesoul
That's why Davidson moved on from such an approach, right? — creativesoul
To deepen my understanding...
Take the sentence: "The snow is white" is true iff the snow is white.
I take this formula to be the linguistic form the truth must take; but it's a formula without the ability to make a truth-claim. Nothing in this formula is claiming that it's true that the snow is white. The entire thing is a conditional.
So we have a formula, but to put it to use we need a fact: Namely, the snow's whiteness.
In your view, is it accurate to say the T-sentence reflects the form (or formulatability) of truth, without actually saying a thing about what is true?
(After saying - "The snow is white" is true iff the snow is white - we still don't know whether it's true that the snow is white. We do, however, know that if the snow is white, it follows that "the snow is white" is true...) — ZzzoneiroCosm
Read the thread and set it out for us. Everybody has to read the thread. Yep, it's a lot to read through. — ZzzoneiroCosm
This is a bad example since snow is always white. (Unless someone adds something, like pee, to it.)
Let's say:
1) "The sun is setting" is true iff the sun is setting.
How can we put this sentence to use without "pointing to" or "attaching it to" or "corresponding it to" a fact? (Not wanting to quibble over the phraseology.)
Without connecting 1) to some fact, how can it be put to use? It's fine as a formula. But we still don't know whether "the sun is setting" is true.
If T-sentences have no use - if they're just a satisfying, deflationary (setting the extensionality of truth) formula - I don't see an issue. But if T-sentences have a use, it seems they can only be put to use when some person links them to some fact (in this case a setting sun).
I have no issue with the T-sentence formula, but in connection to truth, and the desire to make truthful statements - especially on subjects more complex than snow and the sun - I don't see a way to put it to use. — ZzzoneiroCosm
It would throw the entire set of referents into question. It would create mystery as to the referents of the new dialect. — ZzzoneiroCosm
But it wouldn't eliminate eliminative materialism, as Banno suggested. — ZzzoneiroCosm
It's not too much to ask. But saying "it's a lot to read through" can be a turn-off. — ZzzoneiroCosm
But we still don't know whether "the sun is setting" is true. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I am further of the view that there are two major categories of things. That which existed in it's entirety prior to language and that which did not. — creativesoul
Yeah, we do. We know "the sun is setting" is true if the sun is setting. SO if the sun is setting, then "the sun is setting" is true. — Banno
Yeah, we do. We know "the sun is setting" is true if the sun is setting. SO if the sun is setting, then "the sun is setting" is true.
What more do you want? — Banno
Why do we need them? Folk seem to just get on with using language without the help of epistemologists. Why shouldn't it just be that we use words to talk to each other, and that's it? — Banno
There seems to be an equivocation going on between equating conceptual schemes with whole languages and considering different conceptual schemes within a language. — Janus
Davidson says the sentence doesn't make reference to a fact. "The sun is setting" is true iff the sun is setting - this sentence doesn't refer to a fact; true enough. But we need the fact of a setting sun to put the sentence to use. We need the fact of the setting sun to know whether "the sun is setting" is true. — ZzzoneiroCosm
quite quickly in this way."The snow is white" is true iff Der Ozean ist Wasser. — Moliere
I don't see how this can work without the fact of a setting sun. Can you explain? — ZzzoneiroCosm
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