Why is it necessary to believe that a truth condition of a statement, considered as a state of affairs, is an eternal abstract object when all that it concerns are contingently formed material particulars or events or generalisations thereof? — fdrake
Am I to read this as a suggestion that I'm blinded to the flaws of realist intuitions because I'm emotionally attached to them? — fdrake
A proposition has no location in time or space, and yet it somehow exists. — frank
This issue has driven some philosophers to reject propositions and deflate truth to a property of sentences or utterances. If you do this, you'll be back with your question about how an 'unstated statement' could be true. You'll have to allow that the only truths are those which have at some point been uttered. — frank
This isn't a particularly remarkable property.
A friendship has no location in time or space. "Where is my friendship?" "Over there by the rug". — fdrake
"There are dinosaurs now" would be true 66 million years ago" to "unstated statement", to me it looks equivalent to "There were dinosaurs 66 million years ago". — fdrake
It isn't equivalent. The quotes indicate an utterance. — frank
The proposition does not contain the moon, the earth, or orbiting. It's not any particular sentence, and its not an utterance — frank
Could you comment on whether realism requires propositions? Am I wrong about that? — frank
I don't see why. One can either take an abstract notion of sentence as one's paradigm (for instance, a sentence is just a set-theoretical object), which delivers the result that most languages will contain sentences that will never be uttered. Or one can define realism directly in terms of facts or situations or something similar (obviously, this may not avoid the issue if you identify facts with propositions, but this is controversial anyway). There are probably other options as well. — Nagase
Well, one can hope to bypass the need for propositions by adopting (for instance) a Davidsonian truth-theoretical semantics. In that case, the "meaning" of a sentence is given by a canonical derivation of the truth-conditions for the sentence, without any need to invoke propositions. — Nagase
I meant that they had the same truth conditions. not that they were equal as strings or utterances. The "would" maybe behaves differently for past events. — fdrake
I think in this case it's more illuminating to focus on truth conditions of statements; which are broadly construable as states of affairs; rather than distilling the proposition as an abstract object that is somehow equivalent to the truth condition but also expresses it. — fdrake
statement or a proposition (and these don't mean the same thing) — fdrake
The "abstract idea" notion of a proposition (as some statement content) is very Fregean, — fdrake
you certainly don't need to have an apparatus of associating eternal mental content with statements to assert the mind independence of whether statements are true or not. — fdrake
I've read a lot of Soames, yes, and I don't think he's right on this issue---see Ludwig & Lepore's reply in their book on Davidson. (That is not to say that I think Davidson's truth-theoretical semantics is the way to go, since I don't.) But whether or not Davidsonian truth-theoretic semantics is the right semantics for natural languages or not is besides the point. The point is that it is not obviously incoherent to adopt this semantics when trying to avoid propositions while at the same time maintaining realism. — Nagase
Some would say Platonic. So? — frank
They can be the same thing. Depends. — frank
propositions considered as eternal mental content. — fdrake
More generally, consider that when someone focusses on truth conditions of statements, the truth conditions are not easily construable as necessarily mental content at all, they can be events, states of affairs, etc - world stuff, worldly happenings not necessarily mind stuff. — fdrake
Yes. I use them ("proposition", "statement") interchangeably most of the time, specifically when I think the distinction doesn't matter. — fdrake
I'm not sure how a proposition is different from a state of affairs. Neither is made of physical objects. — frank
If you contextualize a sentence, how is that different from using a proposition (except for not mentioning the word?) — frank
Why does this matter if we're already going to stipulate that a sentence is truth apt? Like "There were dinosaurs 66 million years ago". — fdrake
I'm not sure I understand your point. The axioms are meant to be interpretive, that is, they are meant to reflect the real understanding that speakers have of their language. So it relates to "real life" by stating the (actual) conditions under which certain linguistic items refer to objects (in the case of referring expressions) or are true of an object (in the case of predicates). — Nagase
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