I have in mind the idea that different statements--in different languages, even--can express the same proposition. I can even express a proposition without using words at all--e.g., holding out a gift-wrapped box is not a statement, but it can indicate (in a certain context) that I am giving you a present. — aletheist
So I can see the motivation for wanting another theory of truth aside from correspondence. I just haven't found that bridge into the topic which makes it easy for me to make heads or tails of. — Moliere
An assertion is a(n endorsement of a) truth claim.
Stipulations on the other hand simply forward associations--X will refer to y, or let x = y. — Terrapin Station
But the only assertions to be had when talking about this are limited to:
* Reports of conventional definitions of the term,
* Reports of particular persons' idiosyncratic usage.
* Reports of what I call "functional" usage of term, which can be different than how the people in question would define the term — Terrapin Station
The definitions (or "meanings" if you like) themselves won't be true or false. They're always stipulations.
Deflation isn't so bad. You know what truth means in the sense that you know how to use the word. There probably isn't any definition that would be useful for teaching people what truth is. Since a definition is an assertion, the learner has to know what truth is in order to understand what a definition is. So the learner knows what truth is prior to hearing any particular definition. — Mongrel
Stipulative definitions are stipulative. But definitions in the dictionary, at least if we follow the Oxford model, are descriptive. So if one gave a descriptive definition of "tomato" as "to move with rapid jerky motions" that would be a false assertion. — Moliere
But the only assertions to be had when talking about this are limited to:
* Reports of conventional definitions/usage of the term . . . — Terrapin Station
but your reliance on "the meanings themselves" looks suspect to me. — Moliere
That argument makes sense to me. But it doesn't seem to answer the question, ya'know? It seems more like an argument for the possibility of answering the question, "What is truth?" — Moliere
Are you referring to "it's not the definition that's true or false per se"? (I make a distinction between meanings and definitions, by the way. Meanings are the inherently mental/private/subjective relations in your head. Definitions are the expressions, for example in words--text or sounds--correlated to those meanings.) — Terrapin Station
(Entailment-T)
a truth-maker is a thing the very existence of which entails that something is true.
So x is a truth-maker for a truth p iff x exists and another representation that says x exists entails the representation that p. — SEP truthmakers
The concept of entailment depends on a more fundamental concept, the concept of immediate entailment. Once you grasp the concept <immediate entailment>, the concept <entailment> is easy to understand.
In particular, to say that one or more propositions “entail” some proposition Q is to say that those propositions are related to proposition Q by a chain of immediate entailments. This means that like immediate entailment, entailment is a relation between propositions and relates one or more propositions to a given proposition.
Some examples
Consider the following list of propositions:
A. <Socrates is a person>
B. <all people are mortal>
C. <Socrates is mortal>
D. <all mortal things have parts>
E. <Socrates has parts>
F. <all things that have parts are made of particles>
G. <Socrates is made of particles>
Here, propositions A and B immediately entail proposition C. This is a chain of immediate entailment one link long, so propositions A and B entail proposition C. Similarly, propositions C and D immediately entail proposition E and propositions E and F immediately entail proposition G. It follows that propositions C and D entail proposition E and that propositions E and F entail proposition G. It also follows that propositions A, B, D and F are linked to proposition G by a chain of immediate entailments. So it follows that propositions A, B, D and F together entail proposition G. — https://systematicphilosophy.com/2011/05/27/what-is-entailment/
Truthmakers are usually said to be the "entity" in virtue of which a truthbearer (a proposition) is true. "Entity" is a misleading term in my opinion. I prefer to say (well, when I talk about this, which is pretty much only when someone else, such as yourself, brings it up, because I don't find it very useful in general) that a truthmaker is simply the conditions that make a claim true. (Per convention there are also falsemakers, by the way--conditions that make a claim false). — Terrapin Station
Truthmakers do not have a causal relationship with truth-bearers. — Mongrel
On the standard view, I'm not sure I can make sense of why there wouldn't be a causal relationship. — Terrapin Station
Propositions that haven't been judged are neither true nor false? — Mongrel
Because presumably we can make true claims about things beyond any causal influence, e.g. the future or the distant, and about things that aren't causal things at all, e.g. counterfactuals. — Michael
Wouldn't some set of facts cause one to make the claim though? — Terrapin Station
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.