a chair isn't a fact — Coben
My car is a fact? — Douglas Alan
If you want to include numbers as ideal or abstract "facts", you can do so. But it's twisting the word out of the ordinary. In philosophy of science, a distinction is made between formal and factual sciences. Well understood, only the latter deal with facts.1 + 1 = 2 is a fact: — Douglas Alan
What do we do when we create or asess truth?
We use/sum up the fact. — Qwex
If you want to include numbers as ideal or abstract "facts", you can do so. But it's twisting the word out of the ordinary. — David Mo
(Sorry, I won't spend an hour watching the youtube you're proposing. Can you propose something more specific? Any particular time?) — David Mo
As I mentioned, some propositions, will not carry a truth value, and different logicians have different opinions about what to do about such propositions. — Douglas Alan
As for the sentence "All events must have a cause", I can see that people may agree or disagree with this statement. Or they may feel that it doesn't have a truth value. But in terms of how logic is to deal with it, I don't see how it is different from any other proposition that might be contentious. — Douglas Alan
My boss has a PhD in Linguistics from the aforementioned Linguistics department, and I just asked him if 1 + 1 = 2 is a fact. He replied that yes it is.I have emailed the linguistics department at one of them, MIT, for any comment they may care to make. We'll see how it goes. — tim wood
If you want to include numbers as ideal or abstract "facts", you can do so. But it's twisting the word out of the ordinary. In philosophy of science, a distinction is made between formal and factual sciences. Well understood, only the latter deal with facts. — David Mo
As we pointed out above, one view about facts is that to be a fact is to be a true proposition
You might go back and ask them just how it is that 1+1=2 is a fact. — tim wood
a fact or belief that is accepted as true
Okay. I was a bit confused, because I thought you said earlier that propositions were either true or false. — 3017amen
In Metaphysics, that's known as a Kantian synthetic a priori proposition. Something beyond pure reason or logic. Both an innate sense of wonderment, and something that can be tested a posteriori; a synthesis of both.
Synthetic propositions are the basis of scientific hypothesizing. — 3017amen
They replied that these are just synonyms, as are so many other words in English. — Douglas Alan
How is fact not an instrument of truth? It's not merely reality, fact is a reference to reality. You would study the fact to know the truth. — Qwex
I've worked with scientists my entire adult life. — Douglas Alan
My boss has a PhD in Linguistics from the aforementioned Linguistics department, and I just asked him if 1 + 1 = 2 is a fact. He replied that yes it is. — Douglas Alan
In the first sixteen seconds of the YouTube you linked there is no more that a child choir that shout about "math facts". It is not too much to begin.
Do you have something less childish that this? — David Mo
Ask him for the difference between applied and pure maths and what is the fact behind the irrational numbers and Riemann axioms. — David Mo
This program of trying to transform all propositions into formal logic was quite problematic, and I'm pretty sure that this goal has largely been abandoned by philosophers. (Though I don't know for sure, since that was the end of my studies in Philosophy of Language.) — Douglas Alan
As for logical paradoxes, such as "This sentence is false", Tarski tried to resolve these sorts of things. IIRC, he argued that "This sentence is false" fails to be a proposition and hence the fact that it can't have a truth value doesn't allow us to conclude that there are propositions without truth values. — Douglas Alan
Such propositions would have truth values, though, would they not? So they are not problematic for those who hold that propositions always have truth values. — Douglas Alan
I think basically you're referring to Logical Positivism. — 3017amen
Whether Russel was in fact a logical positivist is a matter of debate, as far as I'm aware. He definitely wasn't part of the movement. — Douglas Alan
No, that's not right. The project of reducing all propositions to formal logic is orthogonal to logical positivism, which is the thesis that only propositions that can be verified (either via irrefutable reasoning or via empirical observation) have meaning. — Douglas Alan
That's not right either Douglas. Formal logic is a priori. — 3017amen
And, because of that, it will be readily evident what its shortcomings are. However, it presents a very good (workable) relation between the meanings of various philosophical expressions.The content of this website is primarily based on Ayn Rand's philosophy, Objectivism.
We cannot a priori determine the truth value of this statement just because it has been expressed in formal logic — Douglas Alan
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.