All else is sophistry. — Banno
↪Banno I get that metaphysics is different from epistemology, but epistemology relies upon metaphysics because the T in the JTB is a direct link to what is. — Hanover
Or it's just you enjoy evasiveness and get some rise out of not being open to actual discussion because you think your position so obvious and correct that it's beneath you to have to explain it. That's at least as it seems. — Hanover
Yes and that is the rub. Metaphysics is beyond epistemology and hence is beyond knowledge which means it is indistinguishable from fantasy. The T of JTB is cannot be directly linked to 'what is' , it is based on naïve reality, in other words it is a fantasy. All one knows is what can be derived from epistemology. — A Seagull
Twas once commonly asserted that the sun is the centre of the cosmos. — Banno
Well... it's simpler than any other? I don't see any substance in your reply. — Banno
Yes, but not by us, nit by the ones for whom "the sun is the centre of the cosmos" is false. We would never say that (and mean it), and it is us for whom it is false (now or then). — Isaac
I'm asking how we establish if it is. — Isaac
Two distinct questions: what is truth? What do we know?
The answer to the first question: "p" is true IFF p. And that is all there is to say on it, apart from some psychological footnotes on performatives.
The answer to the second question: we know all sorts of different things, from how to ride bikes thru how to multiply numbers to where you left your keys.
The supposed bit in between, the philosophical musings about justified true beliefs, is a philosophical quagmire, a bottle trap for blow flies.
SO I've provided the answer to "when is it true that the cat is on the mat". You are now asking the quite different question: how do I know that the cat is on the mat? And the answer to that question is multifarious and subject to change. Because I can see him; because WIfe told me so; because he was there when last I looked. — Banno
Here's a fine fly-bottle. A Seagull who writes eloquently, yet without knowing.
I put it to you that you know plenty of cool stuff, but philosophy tells you otherwise. Drop the philosophy. — Banno
IT was false for them, too. They were what We In The Trade call wrong. — Banno
...then the statement ""A" is true IFF A" is itself only contingently true (upon it being the case that "A" is true if A). — Isaac
Ramsey would say "the cat is on the mat" is true if when we look at the mat we see the cat there. — Isaac
↪A Seagull Doubtless; I have honours and a masters, and have been studying philosophy for over forty years.
But I could lean some more.
So, educate me. — Banno
So we have "A" is true IFF A" iff "A" is true IFF A" — Banno
The second A can be replaced with some justificatory action - procedure X - so "the cat is on the mat" is true iff procedure X produces the expected results (we go to pick up the cat and it is indeed there) — Isaac
Play with it a bit, and you may find that T-sentences exactly capture what you are saying here. — Banno
the existence of a verification procedure or justification for a statement was necessary for a statement's truth, "There are dinosaurs" would be false before the advent of humanity because there would be no verification procedures or justifications. — fdrake
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