Heracloitus
He's trying to imply that because we can be objective about knowing little, we can be objective about knowing a lot, which obviously makes no sense. — neonspectraltoast
Heracloitus
I said I believe in an objective reality. I can't prove the existence of one. No one can. — neonspectraltoast
neonspectraltoast
neonspectraltoast
Mww
“...the definition of the word truth, to wit, the accordance of the cognition with its object...
— Mww
Yes, correspondence theory of truth. Aristotle. — David Mo
But limiting itself to the pure form of the proposition. — David Mo
The statement "The snow is green" is true if and only if the snow is green, is a banality from the point of view of knowledge of the world. — David Mo
I suggest that a theory about truth is neither impossible nor pointless. — David Mo
Banno
All we can know is that "something" exists. We can't discern what that something is. I believe in an objective reality, but from a human perspective we know very little about it. — neonspectraltoast
BitconnectCarlos
Really? What is better? For some 'better' is winning in the shortest amount of moves possible. For others 'better' is the ingenuity of play. If you mean 'better' as simply winning the game, then isn't that merely the performance of a logic that is fundamentally a subjective framework? Winning a game invented by humans; whereby the semantics and rules are collectively agreed upon, acting as a kind of subjective constraint.
Banno
The statement "The snow is green" is true if and only if the snow is green, is a banality from the point of view of knowledge of the world. — David Mo
neonspectraltoast
Banno
No, I don't. — neonspectraltoast
Banno
neonspectraltoast
Banno
I don't know what English is, exactly. — neonspectraltoast
I believe in an objective reality we know little about — neonspectraltoast
neonspectraltoast
Banno
neonspectraltoast
Isaac
Yes, it is - that's part of the point. "...is true" is banal. It adds nothing to what has already been asserted. — Banno
David Mo
The substitution axiom is a mathematical axiom. I would like to know what it has to do with the existence of objects outside the mind and the possible knowledge of them. Can you explain it?Agreed, for in no other way is criterion for truth irreducible, then to the form to which all substitutions in it must adhere. If substitution violates the form, the substitution is false. — Mww
David Mo
Yet the strategies within chess are objective - they exist regardless of whether a mind grasps them or not. The physical component of chess isn't relevant either: — BitconnectCarlos
David Mo
Yes, it is - that's part of the point. "...is true" is banal. It adds nothing to what has already been asserted. — Banno
David Mo
Investigating truth will not tell you what to believe about Covid-19; for that, you will hav to investigate Covid-19. — Banno
Banno
"Covid19 kills if and only if Covid-19 kills" — David Mo
Isaac
let's just refer questions about Covid-19 to the medics, not the philosophers. — Banno
Isaac
Your answer? — Banno
Cheshire
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