Slowly...For someone to claim that a statement or proposition is true, it means ''I believe this statement'. — A Seagull
For someone to claim that a statement or proposition is true, it means ''I believe this statement'. — A Seagull
IF that were so, no one would ever be mistaken; for to be mistaken is to beleive that such-and-such is true, when it is not. — Banno
People can still be mistaken, in fact people are often mistaken. — A Seagull
...yes, indeed; so we treat what you said as a reductio, and conclude that your "For someone to claim that a statement or proposition is true, it means ''I believe this statement'" is wrong... — Banno
The cat is on the mat.
"The cat is on the mat" contains six words.
See the difference? — Banno
I disagree with the fact that it makes any useful claim about truth. — Isaac
So all you're left with is the proposition - when someone else says "the cat is on the mat" it is true IFF I would say "the cat is on the mat" in the same circumstances. — Isaac
and make itwhen someone else says "the cat is on the mat" it is true IFF I would say "the cat is on the mat" in the same circumstances
when someone else says "the cat is on the mat" it is true IFF I believe "the cat is on the mat" in the same circumstances
Who said that it was useful? All I am claiming is that it is right! — Banno
...which is to say that when someone else and I say "the cat is on the mat", we mean the same thing. — Banno
So. A more encompassing definition of 'true' is perhaps - statements which are true are those which we are likely to say they are true in normal circumstances. — Isaac
So, your cat is on the mat if you see him on the mat?
— Hanover
That's silly. Sometimes he is on the mat, and I'm not even in the house.
Make your point. If there is one. — Banno
There is the cat, on the mat, before poor Hanover, and yet he cannot know that the cat is on the mat! — Banno
How do I know the cat is on the mat? — Hanover
There is the cat, on the mat, before poor Hanover, and yet he cannot know that the cat is on the mat! — Banno
SO we agree that people make mistakes. A mistake is when someone believes something that is not true.
But you had claimed that, that a statement is true means that someone believes it. IF that were so, then it could never be the case that something were believed and yet not true. — Banno
He's not on the mat. He's on the chair. — Banno
But things are not true or false because they are justified or unjustified... — Banno
So... one never asserts a proposition that is false? — Banno
Again, you confuse his being on the chair with you being able to tell, to know, to believe that he is on the chair. — Banno
Or perhaps it is the lack of competent foreplay. — Banno
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