We don't know how things really are, we only know how we believe them to be... — Isaac
In order to know that we do not know how things are, we must already know both... how things are and what we believe about how things are. We must perform a comparative analysis between the way things are and what we believe about the way things are. — creativesoul
It's possible the answer to all these questions is actually in your last paragraph, but if so, I'm afraid I couldn't make any sense of it, so I'd be grateful for a re-wording. — Isaac
Interesting. So you're saying that 'believing' is one attitude we can have toward a proposition's content, but there's some other attitude we can have toward it which you're saying is the one we use to apply the label 'true'? Do you have a name for this other attitude? When does it kick in? — Isaac
It doesn't matter that I might not know what the actuality is. When I make a statement about what is true, my intention is to say what is true, not merely to say what I believe is true. On a "meta-level" what I am saying may be merely an expression of my belief (it also may happen to be an expression of the truth, even if I can never be certain that it is). But that "meta-caveat" is not the same thing as the logic that is inherent in the intention underlying truth-statements. You are conflating the two. — Janus
If I could be wrong in believing that Donald Trump is POTUS, then this possibility is contingent upon there being an actual state of affairs — Janus
Donald Trump being or not being POTUS at the time in question, that would make my belief true or false. — Janus
This assumes that there is a reality to be perceived or not perceived directly, no? — Janus
It's a planet we can't in principle know about, in the past or during the heat death of the universe where it's expanded to the point that it's impossible to travel there. Or it's cloaked by the Romulans. — frank
If truth is a property of statements, and there were no statements prior to the advent of humanity, how could there have been truths prior to the advent of humanity? — Janus
Yes. I make that presumption. I don't think we could provide much by way of justification, but I also don't think we're capable of doubting it. — Isaac
If we have no reasonable grounds or mechanism by which the two could be assumed to be the same then we must conclude that they would only be so by chance. — Isaac
...if 'true' is a category of belief, then nothing about the real world determines what goes in that category, it's a human-made one. We decide what's in and what's out. Like 'blue'. — Isaac
I wasn't suggesting there were no dinosaurs prior to the advent of humanity. There being dinosaurs would be an actuality, not a truth (in a context where truth is considered to be a property of propositions or statements). — Janus
#1 How can one know what truth is, without knowing what truth is in the first place? — Monist
Let * be [ (y is true => there exists a human x that can express y)]
* is equivalent to "if there is no human x that can express y, y is false" - the antecedent is true whenever there are no humans, so if * holds an arbitrary y is false (when there are no humans). Implications of trivialism aside, the interesting thing is: — fdrake
We could say that what would appear to us as dinosaurs (if we had been there) were there prior to human life. — Janus
Even if a sentence that expresses P was never uttered at any time, P would still be truth-apt. — frank
don't see the problem? We can interpret "What would there be without humans?" and "What was there before humans?" questions unproblematically; the Earth would orbit the sun even if there were no humans. — fdrake
You just end up with these eternal abstract objects, some if which are false. — frank
The proposition is the abstract object — frank
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