I think there is substantial agreement about what is 'true' in the world. — A Seagull
think there is substantial agreement about what is 'true' in the world. — A Seagull
I agree (using your 'labelling' type definition of 'true'). But if the definition were limited to the sort of thing about which there is such agreement, then virtually no proposition in philosophy could be labelled 'true'. — Isaac
"shorthand" must be the new tautology.
I maintain the proper distinction here is not between adjective and noun but between meaning and definition.
The former requires thought while the latter requires a dictionary which might define truth as "all things that are true."
In that sense, truth is very much the product of our encountering, engaging with, and coming to understand the entities within the world that we are in. When our assertions reveal those entities as they show themselves to be, then our assertions are true. When our assertions conceal how entities would otherwise show themselves to be, then our assertions are false. Either way, our regular and ongoing concernful engagement in the world is permeated through and through with truth. We are either trying to reveal or to conceal the world as it shows itself to be. Either way, we are in the truth/false business.
So though there are things that are true, there are no truths that are things. — NOS4A2
Propositions (or statements) can be labelled as 'true' when they are considered to be an accurate representation of an idea that the brain/mind has labelled as 'true'. — A Seagull
Indeed. That's the point I was making. If we're only using 'true' like 'blue', limiting ourselves to that which we all agree on, we're not going to have a great many of the most interesting concepts labelled 'true'. Maybe that's as it should be though. — Isaac
Propositions (or statements) can be labelled as 'true' when they are considered to be an accurate representation of an idea that the brain/mind has labelled as 'true'. — A Seagull
Propositions (or statements) can be labelled as 'true' when they are considered to be an accurate representation of an idea that the brain/mind has labelled as 'true'. — A Seagull
Sure, but that would be a really weird use of the word. Totally out of kilter with the way it's used at the moment so I don't think you'll get many takers. — Isaac
Propositions (or statements) can be labelled as 'true' when they are considered to be an accurate representation of an idea that the brain/mind has labelled as 'true'. — A Seagull
I would tweak it as "an assertion is true if the entity toward which it is directed shows itself to be as asserted." As a result, we move beyond a correspondence between a proposition and what the mind has labeled as true to a correspondence between a proposition and how entities within the world show themselves to be. We have now shed the pesky and unnecessary "representation of an idea". — Arne
We understand, or learn how to use, "truth" in our language-games, including the "knowing" ones. Same as understand, or learn how to use, knowledge without "knowing" what knowledge is.#1 How can one know what truth is, without knowing what truth is in the first place? — Monist
Can we even justify this question?Similar question #2 Can we justify justification?
#1 How can one know what truth is, without knowing what truth is — Monist
A Seagull is essentially pushing a correspondence theory of truth that could be fruitful if tweaked. — Arne
But that doesn't mean it is not part of a better system.
If one wants a simple, self-consistent and comprehensive philosophy, then IMO it is not only the best but the only way to go. — A Seagull
#1 How can one know what truth is, without knowing what truth is in the first place?
Similar question #2 Can we justify justification? — Monist
#1 How can one know what truth is, without knowing what truth is in the first place? — Monist
You seem to be making the assumption of 'naïve reality' whereby the world is pretty much or even exactly as we perceive it. For me this is a naïve assumption, albeit a popular one.
It makes more logical sense to only assume that we have a model of the world.
A Seagull
15 hours ago — A Seagull
It makes more logical sense to only assume that we have a model of the world. — A Seagull
It makes more logical sense to only assume that we have a model of the world. — A Seagull
Yes, let us create a model of the world, declare it to be the real, and treat the world as less real than the model of the world. That is not a winning argument. — Arne
If one wants a simple, self-consistent and comprehensive philosophy, then IMO it is not only the best but the only way to go. — A Seagull
'Better/, 'Fruitful' for what? What is it these systems are trying to achieve that you think this approach might make more likely? — Isaac
One way in which it can work, is to (arbitrarily) declare particular basic sentences to be true. Next, all sentences that necessarily follow from these basic sentences are also true, in accordance with the rules of logic that you consider to apply. Therefore, a sentence is logically "true" when it has the same truth status as the basic sentences of the theory created by the basic sentences — alcontali
One does not need to declare that a model of the world is 'real', all one needs to do is to realise that the model is all one knows about the world. — A Seagull
Perhaps the point to realise is that your model of the world differs from everybody else's and that their is no perfect or 'real' model with which to compare it. — A Seagull
There is no correspondence. — A Seagull
Propositions (or statements) can be labelled as 'true' when they are considered to be an accurate representation of an idea that the brain/mind has labelled as 'true'. — A Seagull
And what is meant by 'an idea that is considered true'? Sounds tautological to me. — A Seagull
an idea that the brain/mind has labelled as 'true' — A Seagull
Propositions are labelled as 'true' when they are an accurate representation of an idea that a person believes. — A Seagull
Ok. you can 'declare particular sentences to be 'true'. But what then? What logical process are you going to use to find those sentences that 'necessarily follow from those basic sentences'? — A Seagull
Even if you do have such a logical process, those sentences that follow and are declared 'true' are only true within that particular system; ie they rely on the truth of the original basic sentences for their truth. — A Seagull
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