Though, I think that so long as we agree that there really were dinosaurs before humans (not just counterfactual "things which would appear as dinosaurs"), we're in agreement. — fdrake
If we don't know exactly when the mat-in-process-of-being-manufactured is in fact a mat, then we don't *really* know what the mat is. (Same thing with a cat as it's being biologically conceived and developing in the womb, or as it is dying, let's hope at a ripe old age.) Or the mat when it is falling apart eventually.
Cats and mats have not only spatial but also temporal extents ... but we don't know what those extents are. (Or as the cat is digesting and assimilating its food, when exactly does the food become the cat?)
The fact that these questions have no clear answers means that the truth (or not) of a simple statement like "The cat is on the mat" is much less clear than it may first appear. — Daz
What was the question again? Truth? Who said anything about being able to "describe the exact physical characteristics" of the cat or the mat?
Are we talking about how to communicate conveniently, or are we discussing what truth consists of? I thought it was the latter. — Daz
Our talk about truth is informed by our grasp of the facts.#1 How can one know what truth is, without knowing what truth is in the first place? — Monist
Yes, on similar grounds. But all justification comes to an end somewhere.Similar question #2 Can we justify justification? — Monist
P is the proposition that there were dinosaurs during the Triassic. Even if a sentence that expresses P was never uttered at any time, P would still be truth-apt.
This is realism. Notice the cost of it. — frank
Sometimes an expectation we have, or an outcome we conceive ahead of time, is fulfilled in the course of events; other times the course of events runs contrary to that expectation or conceived outcome. We recognize this distinction in experience. It is reflected in our talk of truth and falsehood. — Cabbage Farmer
We don't fabricate these values out of whole cloth. — Cabbage Farmer
They express thought and belief. — creativesoul
Beliefs can be used as truthbearers — frank
Somewhere down the line I became accustomed to using the term "judgment" to indicate the thing that's said to be true or false in a wide range of contexts, even in some cases where there is no linguistic expression, even in some cases where there is no language.The key in understanding the role that truth plays in all thought, belief, and statements thereof(including but not necessarily limited to expectations(prediction)... is... I think... taking proper account of the common denominator... thought or belief.
That's what can be be true(or not), but not all of them... — creativesoul
I see no reason to say that truth values of assertions about states of affairs blink in and out of existence along with the corresponding states of affairs. But what difference would this theoretical construct make for us, as speakers who make assertions about states of affairs, who test and try such assertions, who affirm and deny and suspend judgment on such assertions?Expectations, while they definitely consist of thought and belief, are not true or false - nor can they be - because they are about what has not yet happened. They are thought and belief about what's to come. They are thought and belief about future events; what's going to happen.
Expectations/predictions cannot be either true or false because there are no states of affairs for them to correspond to(or not). That particular time has not yet come/arrived. — creativesoul
The key in understanding the role that truth plays in all thought, belief, and statements thereof(including but not necessarily limited to expectations(prediction)... is... I think... taking proper account of the common denominator... thought or belief.
That's what can be be true(or not), but not all of them...
— creativesoul
Somewhere down the line I became accustomed to using the term "judgment" to indicate the thing that's said to be true or false in a wide range of contexts, even in some cases where there is no linguistic expression, even in some cases where there is no language. — Cabbage Farmer
It may be this habit of mine has been influenced by talk among philosophers of "perceptual judgment".
I'm content to say that beliefs, judgments, assertions, and thoughts that resemble such things, are among the things we call true or false. — Cabbage Farmer
I might say some thoughts do not resemble assertions and have no truth value; it depends on how we decide to use the word "thought". Perhaps I leave this undetermined in my own use of the term, to accommodate the wide variety of uses I encounter in the speech of others. — Cabbage Farmer
It seems truth value is also implicated in the distinction between perception and misperception. Perhaps we should say it's the "perceptual judgment" involved in an instance of perception or misperception that bears the truth value?
But yes, not that I care, but I've been called an anti-realist. — creativesoul
"I saw Donald Trump in studio the other day."
"Sure..."
"It's true, he was eating a taco bowl with the production crew."
But otherwise, don't know what truth means — h060tu
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