• JerseyFlight
    782
    "If, on the other hand, one takes Traski's truth definitions to say something about the relations of specific languages to the world, one cannot at the same time claim that he has told us all there is to know about the concept of truth, since he has not told us what the concept is that his truth definitions for particular languages have in common." Donald Davidson, The Folly of Trying to Define Truth, The Journal of Philosophy, Volume 93, Issue 6 (Jun., 1996), 263-278

    Where Davidson critiques Tarski for failing to provide completeness, here a definition of truth is already presumed. This proves that one is playing a game of semantics against themselves, even more so than against others, one is essentially ignorant or lying to oneself about one's commitments. Perhaps it can even be said that one is in denial? The real question is why one should proceed into the abyss of such a game when it contradicts itself from the outset?

    As per the rigor of analytical standards why is one using words? Perhaps one should stop? As mentioned above, isn't the conclusion that one is merely lying to themselves? What is one attempting to achieve? (This question strikes at the hidden motive, one must be able to follow the rabbit down the psychological hole).

    "I think that Tarski was not trying to define the concept of truth -- so much is obvious -- but that he was employing that concept to characterize the semantic structures of specific languages." Ibid.

    Not at all. Here the attempt was made. Let us not recast the action. If the semantic structure is used to evade the game in which it confesses to be engaged, here we find a back and forth equivocation between semantics and truth premises. When one comes under attack the technique is to pivot to the other. Like religion, denial is what drives this psychological sphere.

    'Here is my hand.'

    'You are born with a hand, may it not be a deformed hand.'


    How shall we proceed against these premises? Should we proceed at all? Should we fall into the web of their semantics? If that is the case then Tarski was trying to "employ" something in the service of rhetoric, but this will be both denied and surely not understood. How can we know what Tarski was not trying to do?

    If one was after a characterization then what can we say one was after? An invention that suits their fancy? Will you deny it? If so, one must explain the correspondence between the thing and its characterizations. If one cannot do this, if one fails to do it, then one cannot say they were characterizing the thing, one is then slammed back against the wall of their fancy.

    Are there then, "semantic structures," or just those architectures that we create through characterization? If there are semantic structures, can we even speak about them, are they the kind of things that can be disclosed through words, or do we merely create impressions of things we imagine? What if words carry us farther away from these structures, what if they shower us in lies? God forbid, what if there are no structures as we so imagine!  

    Surely there can be no such thing as a specific language, that is, not if we deem to be analytical about the concept. How many words does a specific language contain? How many symbols? Is there one less, does one add one more, then how is this specific? Did Davidson mean to say, semantic characterizations of arbitrary language structures?

    "Lees, Horwich, Williams, and others who have contended that all Tarski did was reveal the usefulness of an otherwise dispensable concept are wrong. They are right that we need a truth predicate for the purposes they, along with Tarski, mention; but they fail to note the obvious fact that at the same time Tarski solved one problem he emphasized another: that he had not, and could not, given the constraints he accepted, define or fully characterize truth." Ibid.

    Shall we say it louder? That he could not define or fully characterize truth! Fully? Did we hear this correctly? Where then can Davidson run to find relief from his own radical skepticism? Let the reader not complain, for the standard has been set by Davidson himself.

    What does it mean to characterize truth? Can characterization ever amount to the fullness of a thing? Who is confused here, the analyzer of these words or the one who is speaking them? What kind of complaint is this: characterization does not amount to fullness? 

    How can Lees, Horwich and Williams say what Tarski did? How, we ask, does this not fall prey to the fullness criteria?

    How can Davidson say that Lees, Horwich and Williams are wrong? We assume by this he does not simply mean the fancy of his characterization? In which sense then, were Lees, Horwich and Williams wrong? Can Davidson fully know it?

    Of course, one wants to claim that this is a preposterous game, and I admit it is, but I am not the one who invented it, I am not even the one who demanded it, but the presumption is that I must play it in order to do something that is important or relevant in terms of philosophy. The presumption is that we are really getting somewhere. So let us return to the linguistic structure to see what else it contains.

    In one instance Lees, Horwich and Williams are wrong and in the next instance they are right. So we can only conclude that it must be fully true that we need "a truth predicate for the purposes they, along with Tarski, mention." How to get around this dilemma? Where Lees, Horwich, Williams and Tarski are wrong and right, Davidson must be fully right or else he can no longer play this game. Or perhaps that is not it, perhaps he must be wrong in order to continue to play this game? Which one is, can anyone tell us whether Davidson must be fully wrong or right in order to play this game? At which point can he no longer play it? We would think if he was right? But then again, how can he play the game if he is wrong? 

    "...but they fail to note the obvious fact..." Here we must have a fully formed truth? I want to hear more about "obvious facts," is Davidson the only one who gets to make use of them? This question is too straight-forward, the real analytical question is, what makes a fact obvious, what makes a fact a fact? Did they, Lees, Horwich and Williams, in fact fail to note something that was obvious, or perhaps it is not so obvious? Perhaps this obviousness is itself a characterization of Davidson's fancy? If that is the case then they had not "failed," for how could they fail to note Davidson's characterization, which is neither obvious nor a fact? Is it obvious in the sense that Davidson has spoken it as a characterization, or is it obvious in the sense that it's a fact?

    Did Tarski even solve problems or did he create them? Further, if Davidson talks about solving and emphasizing problems, then he is speaking of that to which his speech is said to correspond, unless Tarski is simply creating problems? Is Tarski merely characterizing problems, and if so is this a full characterization? It looks very much like Tarski may be creating problems? But if that is the case then what is Davidson doing?


    More to come,
    Davidson's conclusion here is most interesting...
  • Srap Tasmaner
    4.9k


    Are you okay?

    Maybe take a little break from this place.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k


    I believe that I part ways with analytic philosophy when it comes to truth.

    The problem with discussing truth and/or defining it is the approach. What sorts of things can be true(in the relevant sense) and what makes them so?

    Davidson's project failed. Not sure why you've taken it or analytic philosophy to heart so much.
  • magritte
    553


    You're beating a dead horse. Analytic philosophy has been done for a while now. What remains are teaching jobs to train throngs of paying students for other activities, a mountain of superfluous books and articles, and interested fools like us.
  • JerseyFlight
    782
    Davidson's project failed.creativesoul

    Where has philosophy then succeeded?
  • JerseyFlight
    782


    "Is it certain that to the word communication corresponds a concept that is
    unique, univocal, rigorously controllable, and transmittable: in a word, communicable?
    Thus, in accordance with a strange figure of discourse, one must first of
    all ask oneself whether or not the word or signifier "communication" communicates
    a determinate content, an identifiable meaning, or a describable value."
    Derrida, Limited Inc

    This Derrida did not start, but he presses deep into the game. In the analytical form the absolute is repeatedly smuggled in to shore up the authority of the critique. Nevertheless, how can the critique defend itself from this same shadow? Here is a problem you often create (unconsciously no doubt) and find yourself perplexed by as you proceed deeper into the analysis from this very premise, but never seem to identify, because identity in this sense does something to the game. What shall we do with it? Pretense against this negation seems to be the answer, which can only mean, that pretense against the form itself cannot be condemned. Do you not comprehend that this is a psychological preference, as opposed to a logical calculation?
  • creativesoul
    11.9k


    Methodological Naturalism. Each success becomes a science. How many sciences are there?
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    In other words, our sense of truth may not be translatable into words, but that doesn't make it any less domineering in our mind's workings. It's a fundamental, and not disposable part of thinking. And so as I'm wont to say, when a guy tells you that truth doesn't exist, he usually thinks it's true...
  • Mww
    4.8k
    Deconstructing the Analytic Concept of Truth.....

    “..."What is truth?" The definition of the word truth, to wit, "the accordance of the cognition with its object," is presupposed in the question; but we desire to be told, in the answer to it, what is the universal and secure criterion of the truth of every cognition. (...) If truth consists in the accordance of a cognition with its object, this object must be, ipso facto, distinguished from all others; for a cognition is false if it does not accord with the object to which it relates, although it contains something which may be affirmed of other objects. Now an universal criterion of truth would be that which is valid for all cognitions, without distinction of their objects. But it is evident that since, in the case of such a criterion, we make abstraction of all the content of a cognition (that is, of all relation to its object), and truth relates precisely to this content, it must be utterly absurd to ask for a mark of the truth of this content of cognition; and that, accordingly, a sufficient, and at the same time universal, test of truth cannot possibly be found. As we have already termed the content of a cognition its matter, we shall say: "Of the truth of our cognitions in respect of their matter, no universal test can be demanded, because such a demand is self-contradictory."
    (CPR A58/B83 in KempSmith, 1929)

    It's a fundamental, and not disposable part of thinking.Olivier5

    ....which says all that can be said about the a priori conception of truth, even if the notion that truth is what we think it is, doesn’t set well with the post-moderns, some of whom, apparently, wish to advance philosophy without actually improving it.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Where has philosophy then succeeded?JerseyFlight
    Generally, philosophy has "succeeded" in generating and methodologically normalizing many, if not most, of the natural and social sciences. More particularly also, for every several or so analytical philosophers like Davidson whose works have "failed", or are negligible, there's at least one Russell or Haack, Goodman or Popper, Rawls or Dennett ... who's work significantly informs other disciplines and occasionally political-economic thought. So what's your point, Jersey?
  • tim wood
    9.2k
    :100: x2 :100:
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    Correspondence between mind and object is practical knowledge. Theorectical knowledge has no object. Like 1+1=2
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    Generally, philosophy has "succeeded" in generating and methodologically normalizing many, if not most, of the natural and social sciences.180 Proof

    Yes, and the scientific method itself is a product of philosophy.
  • tim wood
    9.2k
    Yes, and the scientific method itself is a product of philosophy.Olivier5

    Easy to say. But I don't think so. The scientific method is a tool. Tools evolve out of, from, the practical hands-on experience of workmen who develop tools to accomplish specific tasks. If you wish to let out the seams of the definition of philosophy to include that, I suppose you may, and maybe there are times when some workmen are also "philosophers," a desirable but unusual circumstance.
  • Jack Cummins
    5.3k
    Truth should not be limited to science. The arts are extremely important too, for capturing mythic and psychological truth. All thef fields of thought and the chorus of authors need to be embraced as raw source material for the philosophers.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    The scientific method is a tool. Tools evolve out of, from, the practical hands-on experience of workmen who develop tools to accomplish specific taskstim wood

    Yes, and philosophers like Aristotle or Newton developed tools while practicing their science.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Much of what is on this thread is incomprehensible. But there is this:

    And so as I'm wont to say, when a guy tells you that truth doesn't exist, he usually thinks it's true...Olivier5

    I assure you that Davidson is not claiming that truth does not exist. That's not what you were saying, is it?
  • JerseyFlight
    782
    Much of what is on this thread is incomprehensible.Banno

    But what then is comprehensible? Does one perceive it thus or does one make it so? Is what is comprehensible, "fully" comprehensible, or merely a characterization of what is comprehensible?

    I assure you that Davidson is not claiming that truth does not exist.Banno

    How do you impart this assurance? In what sense do you assure? In what sense is Davidson not claiming, partially or fully? I suspect you must be speaking of an "obvious fact?"
  • Banno
    24.8k

    Yeah. Not much point in this, is there.
  • JerseyFlight
    782
    Not much point in this, is there.Banno

    Are you asking the question, stating your opinion, claiming to "assure" of a fact?

    If there is no point, then why make the claim of assurance? Why give your opinion that you struggle to comprehend ("incomprehensible")?

    You mentioned something about "not claiming" and truth existence, beyond this, an ability that you possess to impart assurance regarding the non-claims of another. I would like to know how this works?
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Hmmm. What is it you think you are doing here?
  • JerseyFlight
    782
    Hmmm. What is it you think you are doing here?Banno

    What exactly do you mean by "it" and "think?"
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    I assure you that Davidson is not claiming that truth does not exist. That's not what you were saying, is it?Banno

    I couldn't care less about Davidson. I was just stating a broad generalisation: when a guy tells you that truth does not exist, he often think it's true.

    The same applies to meaning, Banno. When you told me a few days ago that there's no such thing as meaning, I suppose you really meant it.

    And to language. When some lunatic tells you that "language does not exist", he often uses some language to say it... (usually English nowadays)
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Obvious stuff. No subtlety, then. Fine.

    It seemed that @Jerseyflight, of loving memory, had read Davidson as denying that there was such a thing, so I'm pleased that you are not following him.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    I'd rather be obvious than illogical. Pretentious thinkers who play with words and never make any sense often THINK that they are subtle but in fact they are just confused.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Yeah. I'd go with pedantic rather than pretentious. It seems to me pretty clear that the OP had not made much sense out of Tarski nor Davidson. It's intricate stuff. I would not claim to have a clear understanding of it, either. In particular, they seem to me to both be acutely aware that "true" has a broader sense than they are dealing with in their work.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    I doubt anyone can productively analyse the concept of truth, because as pointed out by Jersey, one needs the concept of truth to analyse anything. It's a fundamental element of our thinking.

    It's like one of those .dll files in the Windows operating system: you can try and delete a line of code in them, but the next time you boot, the line of code you deleted reappears in the file. Like magic. That's because the system won't work without it, so there's a routine that fixes the tampered file before launching the operating system.

    We humans can't boot without truth. It's too important a part of our operating system. You can try and write it off your thinking but it will instantly reappear.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    I doubt anyone can productively analyse the concept of truth,Olivier5

    Well, then, you and I and Davidson are in agreement.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    And Jersey as well then.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Yes. The point is, he misunderstood and misrepresented Davidson and Tarski.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    Meh... He just says that they assume unconsciously the concepts that they critique, and thus that their critique is ill-founded.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

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.