Isn't that exactly how you use it when you speculate (with or without committing) as to the relative merits of competing (and perhaps currently unfalsified) theories? — bongo fury
I'm always surprised when anyone takes "what they do mean" to be a matter of fact. — bongo fury
so that’s a planet we would see if we went there. Same as a cup we would see if we opened the cupboard. — Banno
But it's the reason some people claim string theory doesn't qualify as science: because it can't presently be verified.
— frank
I thinks it's rejected because it is thought that it cannot be verified (or falsified) in principle,as opposed to merely "presently". — Janus
The way 'truth' is most commonly used is simply that it consists in what says how things really are. — Janus
this doesn't at all change the fact that truth, whatever it might be, whether known by us or not, is thought to accord with the way things really are. — Janus
But in order to use a category, we must know what the criteria for membership are. If the criteria for membership were {things which really are true} then we should not be able to put anything in that category. At best it can be {things we're happy to assume are the case}. It can only ever be about belief/judgement because that's all we have, we cannot check with some higher authority. — Isaac
I really don't understand whysso much mental effort is put into this convoluted project of trying to rescue the divinity of the term 'true' from the clutches of the evils of justified beliefs. Some leftover of religious certainty our secular culture is still trying to fill, I think. — Isaac
I think the reason is that it is important to acknowledge that there are actualities which are independent of human opinion. In some sense truth just is actuality. But we think of actuality as different to truth in the sense that truth consists in what can rightly be said about actuality. — Janus
in countless ordinary cases we know what accords with actuality — Janus
You make up that a cat is probably there from a few sketchy outlines and a lot of prior expectation and then you don't even bother checking unless something gives you reason to. That is - by the best science we currently have - actually how your perception works. — Isaac
When we say a proposition is 'true' we are saying that we believe it accords with reality. It is a statement about our judgement, not about the world. — Isaac
And there is no rationality that can show how any statement can have a direct correspondence to the 'world of actuality'. — A Seagull
You are referring to the common or normative usage of the word 'true', in which case I would agree with you. But it is IMO a naive usage. It works fine for most people, but on closer examination for philosophy, it is plain that one only knows a model of the world rather than the 'actuality of reality'. — A Seagull
when we say a proposition is true we are saying that it accords with reality, not merely that we believe it accords with reality. — Janus
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