"There are dinosaurs" would be false before the advent of humanity because there would be no verification procedures or justifications. — fdrake
There'd be no one to say anything of "there are dinosaurs", so I don't think it would be false. It just wouldn't be labelled either way. — Isaac
I am pretty sure it would be false if the logic has excluded middle. — fdrake
Play with it a bit, and you may find that T-sentences exactly capture what you are saying here. — Banno
"We should reconcile ourselves with the fact that we are confronted, not with one concept, but with several different concepts which are denoted by one word" — Isaac
I am not here to educate people. — A Seagull
Probably just as well. — Banno
Person A "The cat is on the roof"- Person B goes out to check.
Person B "That's true" — Isaac
So long as justification and verification are fallible, and there are truths prior to the advent of humanity, justification and verification are logically independent (in the sense of not formally entailing anything about) of statement truth value. — fdrake
But it's the reason some people claim string theory doesn't qualify as science: because it can't presently be verified. — frank
put the cup in the cupboard. We can’t see it, we can’t verify that it is true that the cup is in the cupboard. — Banno
It's verifiable in principle. Just open the door.
You didn't believe that meaning is truth conditions anyway, did you? You're more meaning-is-use. — frank
What you have shown here is that sometimes folk use "that's true" for "I agree with you". — Banno
You trying to claim that what is 'true' (even for the people at the time) is what we currently think is the case is just not how 'true' is used. If you're not defining 'true' by how it is used, then I'm not interested in going any further because I don't hold with trying to define what things should mean, only what they do mean. — Isaac
sometimes folk use "that's true" for "I agree with you".
— Banno
...But never, in my experience, for "that is what people in the future will come to think when science has advanced sufficiently far". — Isaac
If you're not defining 'true' by how it is used, then I'm not interested in going any further because I don't hold with trying to define what things should mean, only what they do mean. — Isaac
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